Mexico, US and Canada revamp
Free Trade Agreement
Mexican Senate approves reforms to adapt the legislation to the T-MAC (ANSA) |
Mexico is celebrating the implementation of a revamped Trade
Agreement with the United States and Canada, which amends and updates the North
American Free Trade Agreement which was signed in 1994.
By James Blears
The new deal, which is called USMCA, took a year of tough
marathon negotiation, during which President Donald Trump several times
questioned the usefulness and benefits of the North American Free Trade
Agreement, as it then stood.
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador says that the
new Agreement will provide greater certainly plus security to Mexico, Canada
and the United States in their mutually linked commercial relationships
stressing: "There are clear rules. There can`t be border closures or
tariff increases without legal procedures, involving panels of the three."
Part of this involves more stringent labor laws, especially
concerning rules of origin and greater parity of workers` pay. And this
necessitated law changes in Mexico, approved by its Congress. President
Lopez Obrador will be travelling to Washington on July 8th and 9th to meet
President Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, to celebrate this
trade progress. July 1st also marked the second anniversary of Lopez
Obrador`s Presidential Election win. But little to celebrate with almost
28,000 dead from the Pandemic, more than a million jobs lost, a more than
twelve percent slump of the Peso against the Dollar this year, an expected ten
percent shrink in the economy this year, and homicides up, mostly linked to
Mexico`s drug cartels.
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