Mexico warns U.S. of
alternatives on trade, points to China
Send a link to a friend
[May 12, 2017]
By Mitra Taj and Gabriel Stargardter
MEXICO
CITY (Reuters) - Mexico sent a stark message to U.S. President Donald
Trump on Thursday, saying an upcoming visit by Mexican officials to
China showed Latin America's second largest economy had other places to
export to if he tore up the NAFTA trade deal.
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) underpins Mexico's
economy, prompting the government to try and diversify away from the
United States, which takes 80 percent of its exports.
Trump indicated in an interview with The Economist published on Thursday
that he wanted to get the U.S.-Mexico trade deficit down to about zero.
He wants to renegotiate NAFTA to get a better deal for U.S. companies
and workers, and has threatened to end the agreement if he does not get
his way.
"We will use (the China visit) geopolitically as strategic leverage"
said Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo, answering questions on
trade at the Mexico Business Forum. "It sends the signal that we have
many alternatives."
Guajardo noted Mexico sends China a fraction of its total exports, and
that the two major manufacturing nations tend to compete rather than
complement one another on trade.
He also offered a rebuke to China on its trade policy.
"We all know that China is not a free trader, that's the reality," he
said. But he added that Mexico has had success persuading China to ease
trade barriers on some goods and expects it to continue to open up as
its economy matures.
The trip to China would be in September, Guajardo said, but he did not
provide details.
A Mexican diplomat in Beijing told Reuters he was referring to the China
International Fair for Investment & Trade summit in Xiamen. "High-level
contact is very frequent," said the diplomat, who was not authorized to
comment.
Guajardo said he was also working on a "radical broadening" of preferred
tariffs with Brazil and Argentina to lower the cost of importing grains
from the South American nations while giving Mexico better access to
their manufacturing markets.
[to top of second column] |
Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo gestures during a news
conference in Mexico City, Mexico May 8, 2017. REUTERS/Edgard
Garrido/File Photo
That would make the "worst-case scenario" of the U.S. withdrawing from
NAFTA less painful for Mexico and strengthen its negotiating hand,
Guajardo said.
"If NAFTA disappears, I can export cars (to the United States) paying
2.5 percent tariffs. If they want to export yellow corn to me, I can
raise tariffs to inaccessible levels," Guajardo said. "But to make that
strategy credible, I have to broaden our agreements with Brazil and
Argentina."
Representatives of Mexico's government and private sector are in Brazil
this week to close new supply deals of corn, soy and rice, members of
the delegation said Thursday.
Still,
Mexico has found it hard to wean itself off trade with its northern neighbor. It
has tried to deepen commercial links with China for years, but the scrapping of
a Chinese high-speed train contract in 2014 soured relations.
The diplomat said Mexico was not sending top-level officials to "China's Belt
and Road Initiative" meeting in Beijing this weekend. Bilateral meetings between
senior Mexican officials and their Chinese counterparts were planned throughout
the year.
Guajardo said that the U.S. trade deficit was not a measure of the strength of
its economy or trade relationship. But he said it might be possible to shrink
the U.S. deficit with Mexico if more North American products were made with
materials from within the region without hurting competitiveness.
Erecting tariffs, however, was "out of the question," Guajardo said. "The
precondition to negotiating NAFTA is that we can't go back to the past," he
added.
(Reporting by Mitra Taj and Gabriel Stargardter; Editing by Alistair Bell,
Richard Chang & Simon Cameron-Moore)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |