The Borneo Post

Canada ‘very keen’ on wrapping up year-old NAFTA

-

OTTAWA: Canada is ‘very keen’ on concluding negotiatio­ns to renew the North American Free Trade Agreement as soon as possible, Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland said, amid signs of progress after months of delays.

Talks to modernise the 1994 trade pact started in August 2017 but have dragged on much longer than expected as Canada and Mexico pushed back against far-reaching US demands for reform. President Donald Trump has said he will walk away from NAFTA unless major changes are made.

In a renewed push, Mexican and US cabinet ministers held a series of meetings in Washington over the past week in a bid to work out their difference­s.

One Mexican official expressed optimism that some kind of agreement could be reached by the end of the month.

“I and Canada are very, very keen to get it done as quickly as possible,” Freeland told reporters

While this is a trilateral agreement ... there are also significan­t bilateral trading issues between each of the countries.

on a conference call.

She did not answer directly when asked whether the end of August was a realistic deadline.

Mexican and US officials are due to meet again next week to work on contentiou­s issues such as wages and rules governing how much North American produced content an automobile must contain to qualify for duty-free status.

Freeland said she was ready to join the talks at any time but did not give details. Canadian officials dismiss speculatio­n that she is being sidelined.

“While this is a trilateral agreement ... there are also significan­t bilateral trading issues between each of the countries,” said Freeland, adding that she welcomed bilateral talks between Canada’s two NAFTA partners.

TheTrumpad­ministrati­on,which complainsN­AFTAcaused­hundreds of thousands of manufactur­ing jobs to move to plants in low-wage Mexico, wants Mexican workers to be paid more and is demanding more North American content in cars and light trucks produced in the NAFTA nations. — Reuters

Chrystia Freeland, Foreign Minister

 ??  ?? Workers are seen at Bri- Steel Manufactur­ing, a manufactur­er and distribute­r of large diameter seamless steel pipes, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. — Reuters photo
Workers are seen at Bri- Steel Manufactur­ing, a manufactur­er and distribute­r of large diameter seamless steel pipes, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. — Reuters photo
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia