News

Mexico-EU trade deal closer to being finalised

The European Union and Mexico have finalised a major upgrade to their free trade deal, agreeing to grant reciprocal market access to one another’s tenders for public contracts.

 According to Reuters, the two parties want to update their trade agreement from 2000. That agreement only covers industrial goods, with services, government procurement, investment and farm produce like livestock and dairy products.

 

EU and Mexican negotiators reached an initial deal two years ago, but Mexico's change of president at the end of 2018 appears to have slowed down progress on finalising the last remaining topic - access to public procurement.

 

European Trade Commissioner Phil Hogan and Mexican Economy Minister Graciela Marquez agreed on the scope of access in a telephone call on Tuesday 28 April.

 

An EU source said Mexico had agreed to permit access to procurement beyond the federal level for the first time, with 14 states ready to open up their procurement markets to EU companies.

 

The agreement will need to be revised and then, in Brussels, translated into all EU languages before being submitted to EU governments and the European Parliament for approval.

 

That submission might normally be done by the end of the year, although could be delayed due to coronavirus restrictions.

 

For the European Union, the Mexico agreements adds to deals struck with Japan and the Mercosur bloc of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay, while trade tensions with the United States persist.

 

For Mexico, an upgraded deal with the EU is part of a strategy to reduce its reliance on the United States, the destination of 80 percent of its exports.

 

Read more about this story here.

Source: Collect
User Comments
Your name * :
E-mail * :
Title * :
Content * (If you can write Vietnamese, Pls use Unicode font):
 
Mã bảo mật * :   
   
Other article