Mexico, Canada leaders vow to fight protectionism
For Original Article Click Here
Mexican President Felipe
Calderon and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper vowed on
Wednesday to fight any move to introduce protectionist
measures in the region as a way to combat the economic
slowdown.
The two leaders -- who
were concerned during the U.S. election race about President
Barack Obama's idea of tweaking the three-way NAFTA trade
pact -- agreed that the best way to speed up economic
recovery was by improving competitiveness, Calderon's office
said in a statement.
During a phone
conversation they vowed to keep a dialogue going to "avoid
the implementation of protectionist policies."
Their phone call came as
the U.S. Senate voted to soften a "Buy American" plan in its
$900 billion stimulus bill, after Obama expressed concern
that it could trigger a trade war.
The amendment gave Mexico,
Canada and other trade partners some comfort they would be
exempted from a requirement in the bill that all public
works funded by the stimulus package use only U.S.-made
iron, steel and manufactured goods.
The United States has
commitments under the North American Free Trade Agreement
and the World Trade Organization to give trading partners
access to its government procurement market, and has
received similar pledges in return.
Calderon discussed the
NAFTA trade pact in a meeting with Obama last month, shortly
before his inauguration. He said afterward that Mexico was
prepared to look at U.S. concerns over environmental and
labor issues but that there had been no talk of reopening or
renegotiating the accord as a whole.
NAFTA has greatly expanded
trade in North America since it went into effect in 1994,
but U.S. labor unions see it as a cause of job losses in big
industrial states.
Calderon has warned in the
past that restricting trade would drive more Mexicans to
cross the border illegally.
Harper, who has said he
does not expect Obama to push for a major reworking of
NAFTA, recently warned about the dangers of erecting trade
walls in a recession.
(Reporting by Catherine
Bremer, editing by Jackie Frank)


