Business World

Final tweaks in North American trade agreement keep lid on e-commerce

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MEXICO CITY — Last-minute changes to a new North American trade deal sank US hopes of making Canada and Mexico allow higher-value shipments to the countries by online retailers, such as Amazon.com, a top Mexican official said on Friday.

The revised pact was set to double the value of goods that could be imported without customs duties or taxes from the US through shipping companies to Mexico.

But Canada’s adoption of a more restrictiv­e threshold during its efforts last month to salvage a trilateral deal prompted Mexican negotiator­s to follow Canada’s lead, Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo said on Friday.

The final version of the trade agreement will insulate retailers in both countries from facing greater competitio­n from e-commerce companies like Amazon. com, Inc. and eBay, Inc.

“It was the solution liked much more by Mexican businesses,” Mr. Guajardo told local television.

The change was came so last minute that it was not written into the agreement published last weekend.

The new deal, called the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), was meant by US President Donald Trump to create more jobs in the US. Mr. Trump had been highly critical of the prior NAFTA deal since before he ran for president.

US negotiator­s originally pushed Mexico and Canada to raise import limits to the US level of $800 from current thresholds of $50 and C$20, respective­ly.

Traditiona­l retailers in Mexico opposed such a big hike, fearing online companies would sell cheap imports from Asia through the US. Even so, Mexico initially agreed in August to raise the threshold on customs duties and taxes to $100 in its bilateral deal with the US.

Guajardo said that Canada, after Mexico had finished negotiatio­ns, set its sales tax exemption at just C$40, about $30, and put a ceiling of C$150, about $117, on custom duties exemptions.

The Retail Council of Canada said the deal will protect retailers against a “massive change in the competitiv­e landscape.”

Mexico decided to follow suit, Mr. Guajardo said, favoring local clothing, footwear and textile industries, as well as the finance ministry that collects duties and taxes.

Mexican negotiator­s lowered the sales tax exemption back to the $50 level, while raising the customs duties limit to $117, matching Canada, Mr. Guajardo said.

“Mexico offered a deal where it really didn’t concede anything,” said Adrian Correa, a senior lawyer at FedEx Corp.

Mike Dabbs, eBay’s government relations director for the Americas, said separate tax and custom duty thresholds could create confusion.

“That does not help the experience for small businesses and consumers,” he said. —

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