Mexico & U.S. to End Final Trade Tariffs

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AnAmericanCitizen

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Critics say the agreement has led to a loss of 1 million factory jobs in the U.S.,
while subsidized U.S. imports have pushed millions of farmers in Mexico off their
land and spurred illegal immigration.


Mexico and U.S. to end final trade tariffs

From Bloomberg News
December 29, 2007

Mexico and the U.S. are about to eliminate the last tariffs on goods they trade,
prompting opposition by lawmakers and farmers in both countries who anticipate a
flood of cheap imports.

In Mexico, farmers plan nationwide protests over what will be the final step in
implementing the North American Free Trade Agreement on Jan. 1 and eliminating
tariffs on American-grown beans and corn. The U.S. will drop tariffs on flip-flops,
glassware and sugar, the most price-sensitive import.

"Back in 1993 when NAFTA was negotiated, 15 years was a lifetime away," said Daniel
Erikson, a senior associate at the nonpartisan Inter-American Dialogue in Washington.
"But now this is really affecting the most sensitive products."

The free-trade agreement among the U.S., Mexico and Canada created the world's
biggest trade bloc, with the exchange of goods and services between the U.S. and
Mexico more than quadrupling to $332 billion a year, according to government data.

Critics say the agreement has led to a loss of 1 million factory jobs in the U.S.,
while subsidized U.S. imports have pushed millions of farmers in Mexico off their
land and spurred illegal immigration.

"Mexican agriculture has been a net loser in trade with the United States, and
employment in the sector has declined sharply," former Clinton administration
official Sandra Polaski testified before the U.S. Senate last year.

In Mexico, protesters plan to form a human wall at main U.S. border crossing points
to block grain imports.

"For us, this is an issue of food sovereignty," said Carlos Navarro Lopez, who heads
the Rural Development Committee in Mexico's lower house of Congress. "The main goal
of the protests is to force the federal government to sit down with the farmer and
lawmakers to see how we can seek a renegotiation."
 
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