Canada to start ratification of North American trade deal
[MONTREAL] The Canadian parliament will begin ratification of the new North American trade pact next week, Prime Minster Justin Trudeau said on Tuesday, as the deal moves close to implementation.
The US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), first signed in 2018, was bogged down in multiple political complications, but its amended terms were finalised in December.
The pact will replace the 25-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta), which President Donald Trump has often complained has been "a disaster" for the US.
Mr Trudeau told reporters legislation would be introduced on January 29 "to ratify the deal."
"Passing the new Nafta in parliament is our priority," he said.
Last week the US Senate voted overwhelmingly to approve the pact, which will now be signed by Mr Trump. Mexican lawmakers adopted the amended terms last month.
Mr Trudeau has denied charges that he sacrificed the nation's aluminum industry to reach the deal.
The new agreement stipulates that 70 per cent of the steel and aluminum used in cars in North America must be produced in Canada, the United States or Mexico.
It specifies that the steel must be molten metal poured in North America, but that is not the case for aluminum, which could open the door to the use of Chinese metal recycled in Mexico.
AFP
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
International
Thailand to increase daily minimum wage to 400 baht in Oct
UK set for weak growth and highest inflation in G7, OECD says
German manufacturing downturn eases in April, PMI survey shows
India RBI's FX intervention eases as conditions turn favourable for rupee
Swiss inflation accelerates faster than expected in April
OECD upgrades global growth outlook as US outperforms