US drops agriculture demand from NAFTA talks
MEXICO CITY: The US has dropped a contentious demand from the renegotiat ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement ( NAFTA) to impose restrict ions on Mexican agricultural exports, Mexico’s top farm lobby said on Sunday.
Talks to rework the 24-yearold pact are entering a crucial phase and Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo said outstanding bilateral issues between Mexico and the US could be resolved by the middle of this week.
Much of the renegotiation, which has gone on for more than a year, has focused on revamping rules for the automot ive industry. The US government wants the rules changed to try to secure more business for American manufacturing workers.
Another divisive issue has
Our US counterparts tell us that ... the US has decided to withdraw (the proposal) from the table. Mario Andrade, CNA vice president for foreign trade
been a proposal by the Trump administration to put seasonal curbs on some agricultural exports to the US. But a senior executive at Mexico’s National Agricultural Council (CNA) said that had been dropped.
“Our US counterparts tell us that ... the US has decided to withdraw (the proposal) from the table,” Mario Andrade, CNA vice president for foreign trade, told Reuters.
Mexico’s Economy Ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Andrade’s remarks. A spokeswoman for the off ice of US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer could not immediately be reached for comment.
Andrade said the move followed a lobbying effort that sought to show that the “seasonality” demand stood to benefit a small fraction of US agricultural producers while putting many other US farmers at risk from Mexican retaliation.
The withdrawa l of the seasonality measure would allow US and Mexican negotiators to focus on the remaining outstanding issues when they reconvene for talks this week.
Officials say that Canada, which has not taken part in the latest talks while the US and Mexico resolve their differences, could soon be asked back to the negotiating table. — Reuters