Mexico pushing labour reform, won't ratify new NAFTA with U.S. tariffs in place

March 4, 2019

Mexico's Congress will be asked to approve a major labour reform bill this spring as a necessary step to ratifying the new North American free trade pact later this autumn, say Mexican officials.

But unless the Trump administration lifts the punishing tariffs it has imposed on Mexican steel and aluminum imports — duties it also imposed on Canada — Mexico is prepared to keep the status quo with the 25-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

The push to improve workers' rights in Mexico was a key priority for Canada and the United States during the rocky NAFTA renegotiation because they wanted to level the playing field between their workers and lower-paid Mexican workers, especially in the auto sector.

When Mexico and the U.S. reached their surprise bilateral agreement last August, forcing the Trudeau government to quickly forge a deal with the Trump administration, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland lauded Mexico for making labour concessions...

This was excerpted from the 3 March 2019 edition of CBC News.


Accessible to: 
Everyone
Topic(s): 
Rules of Origin & Trade Agreements / CUSMA/USMCA
Information Source: 
Canadian News Channel
Document Type: 
Email Article