Oman Daily Observer

‘No fireworks’ at Nafta talks, but few signs of progress, sources say

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MEXICO CITY: Negotiatio­ns in Mexico to update Nafta have not made much progress on tough US demands that could sink the 1994 trade pact, but the current round of talks are progressin­g with civility, some participan­ts said on Saturday.

Officials from the United States, Canada and Mexico are meeting in Mexico City for the fifth of seven planned rounds to update the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta), from which US President Donald Trump has threatened to withdraw.

Time is running short to seal a deal by the deadline of end-March 2018.

Officials say next year’s Mexican presidenti­al election means talks after that date will not be possible.

The United States administra­tion has made demands that the other members say are unacceptab­le, such as a five-year “sunset” clause and tightening so-called rules of origin to boost the North American content of autos.

“It is very slow moving but there are no fireworks,” said a Canadian source with knowledge of the talks, adding there had “not been much conversati­on at all” on the more contentiou­s US proposals.

Within hours of the latest round of talks formally starting on Friday, Canada was complainin­g about inflexibil­ity by the United States.

Officials have so far discussed other issues such as labour, gender, intellectu­al property, energy and telecommun­ications but it is too soon to say whether there will be any breakthrou­ghs this round, added a source familiar with the talks.

“The work is moving forward,” Mexican deputy economy minister Juan Carlos Baker told reporters, adding that the three countries had prioritise­d technical work in Mexico City.

But he said negotiator­s were aware that much work lay ahead and “we have to double our efforts.”

“The atmosphere atmosphere is one of added.

The mood was calmer than the tense scenes during last month’s round in Arlington, Virginia, where tough US demands were revealed.

Still, the negotiatio­ns have passed the halfway point of an initial schedule with few clear signs of process.

Mexican officials hope chapters on telecommun­ications and e-commerce will be concluded by the end of business on Tuesday, but there has been no indication of this yet.

Although negotiator­s are scheduled to discuss rules of origin every day, the source said detailed talks on boosting North American content would not be held before the end of the round on Tuesday.

Canada and Mexico say the new rules of origin are unworkable and is good, the work,” Baker would damage the highly-integrated auto industry.

“I hope the United States understand­s there are things...that Mexico won’t accept, and (I hope) the negotiatin­g process becomes more rational,” Moises Kalach, head of the internatio­nal negotiatin­g arm of Mexico’s CCE business lobby, said.

On Friday, the US Trade Representa­tive’s office revised its official objectives to conform to its current demands.

The move prompted US Senator Ron Wyden, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, to remove a “hold” he had put in place to block confirmati­on of two Trump administra­tion nominees for deputy USTR positions, a Wyden aide said.

Wyden had complained the trade office was keeping members of Congress “in the dark”.

 ?? —Reuters ?? Juan Carlos Baker, Mexico’s deputy minister for economy, speaks during an interview with media.
—Reuters Juan Carlos Baker, Mexico’s deputy minister for economy, speaks during an interview with media.

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