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‘Real’ NAFTA talks unlikely until later 2017
Bloomberg News
Mar. 8, 2017 3:57 pm
WASHINGTON - The U.S. government probably won't begin 'real” negotiations to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement until later this year, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said.
'I would like the results tomorrow, but that is not the way the world works,” Ross said Wednesday in an interview with Bloomberg Television. He said it probably will be 'the latter part of this year before real negotiations get underway.”
Ross, who was sworn in last month as Commerce secretary, said he hopes the talks don't take 'substantially longer than a year.”
The secretary's comments come as U.S. partners in the agreement brace for negotiations that could grow contentious and even result in an end to one of the world's largest free-trade zones.
Canada has called for talks to begin soon amid concerns that uncertainty over the outcome will stymie investments, while Mexico's government has already started discussing the deal with businesses that depend heavily on NAFTA.
The Mexican peso has depreciated 6 percent since Donald Trump won the presidency as investors bet his pledge to narrow the U.S. trade deficit with its southern neighbor will hurt the economy. The Canadian dollar has weakened 0.9 percent since the U.S. election.
Ross said the Trump administration is having 'preliminary” discussions with U.S. lawmakers about NAFTA, but hasn't given Congress official notice that it will start negotiations. Under the law that hands the president so-called fast-track authority on trade pacts, Trump must give Congress 90-days' notice that he intends to revise an existing agreement. Before starting talks, he must lay out the administration's goals and consult with key committees in the House and Senate.
Any of the three NAFTA participants can withdraw from the deal on six-months' notice. Trump has said he would pull out if his counterparts aren't willing to renegotiate a deal.
Zuma Press/TNS 'I would like the results tomorrow, but that is not the way the world works,' Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross says of NAFTA negotiations.
Reuters 'I would like the results tomorrow, but that is not the way the world works,' Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross says of NAFTA negotiations.