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Donald Trump victory puts pressure on Mexico over NAFTA trade deal
Donald Trump victory puts pressure on Mexico over NAFTA trade deal

Donald Trump victory puts pressure on Mexico over NAFTA trade deal

Mexico is willing to discuss and “modernise” the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) with US President-elect Donald Trump’s administration but will not renegotiate the pact, Mexico’s top officials have said on Thursday (10 November).

Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo said he would try to explain how important the deal is for the region to Trump, who has heavily criticised and called it the worst trade agreement that Washington has ever signed.

He hopes to persuade Trump that the deal – signed in 1994 between the United States, Mexico and Canada – is beneficial to the US as well: “We’re ready to talk so we can explain the strategic importance of NAFTA for the region. Here we’re not talking about … renegotiating it, we’re simply talking about dialogue.”

Deep, multifaceted, mature and solid

Foreign Minister Claudia Ruiz Massieu was also trying to be upbeat. She said: “The bilateral relationship between Mexico and the United States does not end, nor begin with an election. On the contrary, Mexico and the United States have one of the deepest, most multifaceted, institutionalised, mature and solid alliances that two countries in the world can have.”

Trump’s protectionist rhetoric has prompted Mexican business leaders to say the country needs to reduce its dependence on the United States.

Analyst Luis de la Calle said first they need to know if he’s really going to dump the deal: “We should look to having sufficient clarity, as quickly as possible, on what kind of proposals could come from the United States with regard to relations with Mexico. But we must also be aware, it’s not very probable there will be such a radical proposal because the benefits are for both economies.”

Trade war talk

If Trump were to follow through on his campaign-trail threats to levy punitive tariffs of up to 35 percent on cars and other goods made in Mexico, a trade war would likely follow.

And that would hit the economies of both countries, given that so far this year, 16 percent of US exports have gone to Mexico. It is the United States’ second-biggest foreign goods market after Canada.

Mexico’s President Enrique Pena Nieto hopes to get more clarity when he meets Trump. An encounter has been agreed between the two, possibly during the transition period before the inauguration in Washinton on January 20 2017.

For now the financial markets are unsure. The peso slumped further on Friday and the cost of government borrowing rose.

What about Canada?

Canada could fall back on a free trade agreement that excludes Mexico if Trump follows through on radical protectionist policies, officials have said.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Thursday that “if Americans want to talk about NAFTA, I’m more than happy to talk about it”, a day after Canada’s ambassador to the US said Ottawa would be “happy” to renegotiate NAFTA.

The envoy, David MacNaughton, said that even if NAFTA were torn up, the two nations would be bound by the terms of the 1987 Canada-US Free Trade Agreement, the precursor to the trilateral deal which added Mexico, noting, “I can’t imagine them wanting to do anything about” that deal.

Agencies/Canadajournal




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