ICYMI: U.S.-Mexico Trade Agreement Announced; Work Continues On New Trilateral NAFTA

Aug 31, 2018
The United States and Mexico announced on Monday a preliminary U.S.-Mexico Trade Agreement that modernizes provisions of the existing North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), clearing a major hurdle toward a new, trilateral trade agreement with two of the largest buyers of U.S. coarse grains and co-products.
 
The new agreement came after five weeks of intensive negotiations in Washington between U.S. and Mexican officials. While Canadian officials have not been involved in the recent talks, Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland is in Washington, D.C., at press time, working with her counterpart, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, to hammer out an agreement that would allow the northern neighbor to join the new pact.
 
“We are grateful for news today that the United States and Mexico have reached an agreement that will keep NAFTA modernization efforts moving,” said U.S. Grains Council President (USGC) and CEO Tom Sleight in a statement about the announcement on Monday. “This agreement is a major step forward for our relationship with Mexico and is a result of hard work over the last year to closely examine our vital partnership.”
 
The U.S.-Mexico agreement would benefit American farmers, ranchers and agribusinesses by maintaining key provisions of the existing NAFTA and expanding access, notably through technical exchanges.
 
The agreement would:
  • keep existing tariffs at zero on agricultural products traded between the United States and Mexico, critical for the U.S. grains industry that counts Mexico as the top international customer for U.S. corn and distiller’s dried grains with soluble (DDGS) and a key buyer of U.S. sorghum and barley.
  • enhance rules for science-based sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) measures beyond even what was included in the now-defunct Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which itself further enhanced commitments at the World Trade Organization (WTO). Most importantly, the agreement would establish a new mechanism for technical consultations to resolve issues between the parties.
  • include foundational language that specifically addresses innovations in agricultural breeding technology, again going farther than the TPP text.
  • include measures aimed at reducing the use of trade-distorting policies and ensuring fair treatment in grading and standards for agricultural products.
Negotiators managed to avoid several so-called “poison pills,” including a seasonality produce proposal that could have impeded trade and created a risk of retaliatory action. The agreement also discarded the idea of a sunset clause in favor of authoring a 16-year agreement that will be subject to a review in six years.
 
Some provisions are still unclear as text is not yet fully released, including the outcome of investor-state dispute resolution provisions that protect U.S. investors from mistreatment; Chapter 19 provisions for reviewing anti-dumping (AD) or countervailing duties (CVD) cases; and harmonization of renewable fuel standards.
 
The Trump Administration has indicated its intention to notify the U.S. Congress of a new agreement on Friday, Aug. 31, with or without Canada, which will largely determine the next steps in the political and legal processes toward a fully revised NAFTA.
Click here to see more...
Subscribe to our Newsletters

Trending Video