United States, Mexico, Canada Reiterate Commitment to NAFTA
Officials from the three North American nations reaffirmed their commitment to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) as the cornerstone for strengthening regional competitiveness at a March 24 meeting of the NAFTA Free Trade Commission.
Since its implementation in 1994, NAFTA has facilitated strong economic growth and prosperity in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman, Mexican Secretary of Economy Sergio Garc�e Alba and Canada Minister of International Trade David Emerson discussed the changing global commercial environment and the implications for North America at the meeting in Acapulco, Mexico.
Following the session, the leaders issued a joint statement reaffirming their commitment to NAFTA and to the removal of impediments to the free flow of goods, services and capital in North America.
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Canada, Mexico agree to uphold NAFTA
Canada and Mexico agreed on Friday to strengthen the procedures of the North American Free Trade Agreement(NAFTA) to ensure its rulings are respected.
"Mexico fully supports Canada's position to make sure that the decisions of the NAFTA panels in the settlement of disputes are upheld," Mexican President Vicente Fox said at a luncheon hosted by Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin in Vancouver.
Canada is demanding Washington scrap duties on Canadian softwood after a NAFTA panel ruled the United States had failed to justify the need for the tariffs imposed three years ago, but has been
NAFTA environmental commission finds Mexico slow to respond to illicit logging
Mexican authorities were sometimes slow to respond to complaints by Indians about illegal logging on their lands, and enforcement was hampered by mountainous terrain, language barriers and limited personnel, the Commission for Environmental Cooperation found in a report issued Monday.
The CEC, set up under the North American Free Trade Agreement – which includes Mexico, the United States and Canada – issued the report in response to Indians' complaints that loggers were clear-cutting pine forests in northern Mexico.
It was the latest chapter in a quarter-century battle that has seen
Borgetti, Marquez to play for Mexico against United States in World Cup qualifier
Jared Borgetti is expected to lead the attack when Mexico faces the United States in a World Cup qualifying match.
The Bolton striker was picked by Mexico coach Ricardo Lavolpe for the match in Columbus, Ohio, on Sept. 3, the Mexican Soccer Federation said Saturday.
FC Barcelona defender Rafael Marquez was also chosen.
Mexico leads the final round of CONCACAF qualifying with 16 points from six matches, followed by the United States with 15 points. The top three teams in the six-team group qualify for the 2006
Borgetti, Marquez to play for Mexico against United States in World Cup qualifier
Jared Borgetti is expected to lead the attack when Mexico faces the United States in a World Cup qualifying match.
The Bolton striker was picked by Mexico coach Ricardo Lavolpe for the match in Columbus, Ohio, on Sept. 3, the Mexican Soccer Federation said Saturday.
FC Barcelona defender Rafael Marquez was also chosen.
Mexico leads the final round of CONCACAF qualifying with 16 points from six matches, followed by the United States with 15 points. The top three teams in the six-team group qualify for the 2006 World
Chinese President to visit U.S, Canada and Mexico in September
The Chinese Foreign Ministry said Friday that Chinese President Hu Jintao plans to visit the United States, Canada and Mexico from Sept. 5 to 17.
The White House said this week President George W. Bush would host Hu on Sept. 7.
China and the U.S. have gone through months of rising trade friction as well as growing cooperation on trying to stop North Korea's nuclear arms ambitions.
Hu will also attend the annual gathering of world leaders at the UN General Assembly in New York, which runs from Sept. 13-16.
The Foreign Ministry statement did
WASHINGTON -- Bowing to opposition from border communities and from the travel industry, the Bush administration said yesterday that it will not require US citizens who frequently cross between the United States and Canada or Mexico to carry a passport, and will instead issue a more simple ''passport card."
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff announced the compromise as part of a package of revised travel rules. Most of the measures will use new technology to clear some of the travel bottlenecks caused by increased security after the 2001 terror attacks.
The moves include the use video
Canada, Mexico Mull Daylight-Saving Plan
Canadians and Mexicans are considering whether to follow U.S. plans to extend daylight-saving time after Congress passed a bill Friday to expand the spring-forward-fall-back scheme by a month.
The energy bill, expected to be signed by President Bush next week, is touted to save energy by expanding daylight-saving time by adding three weeks in the spring and a week in the fall, taking it up to Halloween.
The change is not slated to go into effect until 2007. But officials in Canada worry about being out of sync with U.S. time for airlines, manufacturers, the financial
The Washington Posts trouble with numbers Mexico after NAFTA
On April 17, the Washington Post ran an article about Mexicos economy and the North American Free Trade Agreement, which took effect on January 1, 1994. Part of the focus was on market forces and the flight of some Mexicans to the U.S.
Still, the past 13 years havent been all bad economic news for Mexico, wrote Manuel Roig-Franzia of the Posts Foreign Service. Spurred by NAFTA, Mexicos gross domestic product has ballooned, multiplying nearly seven-fold, from $108 billion in 1993, the year before NAFTA implementation, to $748 billion in 2005.
If
Short on trucks, GM gears up in Mexico
With its employee-pricing sale over, General Motors Corp. is turning to its Mexican factories to replenish the stocks of American auto dealers.
"We're short on trucks. Dealers don't have them in all the colors and with all the options that people want," said Gilbert Duhn, a customs manager for the company. "We've started building more trucks in Mexico."
Such a move wouldn't be possible without the North American Free Trade Agreement, Duhn said during a speech at the NAFTA vs. Global Competition conference here, which ended Friday. The two-day event was hosted by
U.S., Mexico, Nicaragua win
Ryan Shealy went 4-for-4 with a home run, two doubles and three RBIs, and Jarrod Saltalamacchia hit two solo homers in leading the United States over Panama 9-3 in a regional Olympic qualifying tournament on Friday.
The United States remained the only unbeaten team in the six-team tournament which ends on Saturday. Four teams advance to the next qualifying event in August at Havana, Cuba.
In other games, Mexico beat Canada 7-2 behind pitcher Rigo Beltran, who gave up one run in six innings, and Nicaragua defeated Guatamala 6-1. AP
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