Nafta Objectives
Nafta Objectives
Nafta Objectives
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Table of Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 2
Summary of Specific Negotiating Objectives for the Initiation of NAFTA Negotiations ............. 4
Trade in Goods:............................................................................................................................... 4
Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS): .................................................................................. 5
Customs, Trade Facilitation, and Rules of Origin: ......................................................................... 5
Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT): ................................................................................................ 6
Good Regulatory Practices: ............................................................................................................ 7
Trade in Services, Including Telecommunications and Financial Services: .................................. 7
Digital Trade in Goods and Services and Cross-Border Data Flows: ............................................ 8
Investment: ...................................................................................................................................... 9
Intellectual Property: ....................................................................................................................... 9
Transparency: ................................................................................................................................ 10
State-Owned and Controlled Enterprises: ..................................................................................... 11
Competition Policy: ...................................................................................................................... 11
Labor: ............................................................................................................................................ 12
Environment:................................................................................................................................. 13
Anti-Corruption: ........................................................................................................................... 14
Trade Remedies: ........................................................................................................................... 14
Government Procurement: ............................................................................................................ 15
Small- and Medium-Sized Enterprises: ........................................................................................ 16
Energy: .......................................................................................................................................... 16
Dispute Settlement: ....................................................................................................................... 17
General Provisions: ....................................................................................................................... 17
Currency:....................................................................................................................................... 17
2
Introduction
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) entered into force over 23 years ago, and
since that time, the U.S. economy and global trading relationships have undergone substantial
changes.
The America that existed when NAFTA was signed is not the America that we see today. Some
Americans have benefited from new market access provided by the Agreement. It contributed to
the linking of the continent through trade, while at the same time NAFTA provided much needed
market access for American farmers and ranchers.
But NAFTA also created new problems for many American workers. Since the deal came into
force in 1994, trade deficits have exploded, thousands of factories have closed, and millions of
Americans have found themselves stranded, no longer able to utilize the skills for which they had
been trained. For years, politicians promising to renegotiate the deal gave American workers
hope that they would stop the bleeding. But none followed up.
In June 2016, then-candidate Donald J. Trump made a promise to the American people: he
would renegotiate NAFTA or take us out of the agreement. As President, he immediately started
work to fulfill that promise. The first NAFTA consultations began just a few weeks after the
President took office.
On May 18th, President Trump became the first American president to begin renegotiating a
comprehensive free trade agreement like NAFTA. At the direction of the President, and
following more than three months of Administration consultations with Congress, U.S. Trade
Representative Robert E. Lighthizer announced the Administrations intention to renegotiate the
deal.
Since Ambassador Lighthizer notified Congress of the renegotiation, USTR has been conducting
extensive consultations with Congress, stakeholders, and the public at large. President Trump is
listening.
The Trump Administration has held dozens of meetings to solicit advice and input. In addition,
USTR sought public comments and received more than 12,000 responses. Finally, USTR held
three days of public hearings on the negotiations and heard from more than 140 witnesses, who
provided testimony on a wide range of sectors, including agriculture, manufacturing, services,
and digital trade. During this process, the Administration received valuable advice which has
directly impacted the development of the negotiating objectives.
Now, in accordance with section 105(a)(1)(D) of the Bipartisan Congressional Trade Priorities
and Accountability Act of 2015, the Administration is providing this summary of specific
objectives with respect to the NAFTA negotiations. These objectives reflect the valuable input
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received during the preceding consultation period from Congress, advisory committees, other
agencies, and members of the public. USTR will continue to consult with Congress and
stakeholders and we will update these objectives as we advance our work on these important
negotiations.
Once negotiations begin, the Administration intends to ensure truly fair trade by seeking the
highest standards covering the broadest possible range of goods and services. A successful
renegotiation of NAFTA will further the negotiating objectives of the United States, as described
in this document, and will benefit the economies and populations of the United States and of our
trading partners. The result will be a much better agreement for Americans.
The new NAFTA must continue to break down barriers to American exports. This includes the
elimination of unfair subsidies, market-distorting practices by state owned enterprises, and
burdensome restrictions of intellectual property. The new NAFTA will be modernized to reflect
21st century standards and will reflect a fairer deal, addressing Americas persistent trade
imbalances in North America. It will ensure that the United States obtains more open, equitable,
secure, and reciprocal market access, and that our trade agreement with our two largest export
markets is effectively implemented and enforced.
Under these objectives, a new NAFTA will give our farmers, ranchers, service providers, and
other businesses new opportunities to grow their exports and reclaim American prosperity. But
most importantly, the new NAFTA will promote a market system that functions more efficiently,
leading to reciprocal and balanced trade among the parties.
If we succeed in achieving these objectives maintaining and improving market access for
American agriculture, manufacturing, and services then we look forward to a seamless
transition to the new NAFTA.
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Trade in Goods:
- Improve the U.S. trade balance and reduce the trade deficit with the NAFTA countries.
Industrial Goods
- Maintain existing reciprocal duty-free market access for industrial goods and strengthen
disciplines to address non-tariff barriers that constrain U.S. exports to NAFTA countries.
- Maintain existing duty-free access to NAFTA country markets for U.S. textile and apparel
products and seek to improve competitive opportunities for exports of U.S. textile and
apparel products while taking into account U.S. import sensitivities.
- Promote greater regulatory compatibility with respect to key goods sectors to reduce burdens
associated with unnecessary differences in regulation, including through regulatory
cooperation where appropriate.
Agricultural Goods
- Expand competitive market opportunities for U.S. agricultural goods in NAFTA countries,
substantially equivalent to the competitive opportunities afforded foreign exports into the
U.S. market, by reducing or eliminating remaining tariffs.
- Provide for enforceable SPS obligations that build upon WTO rights and obligations,
including with respect to science based measures, good regulatory practice, import checks,
equivalence, and regionalization, making clear that each country can set for itself the level of
protection it believes to be appropriate to protect food safety, and plant and animal health in a
manner consistent with its international obligations.
- Establish a mechanism to resolve expeditiously unwarranted barriers that block the export of
U.S. food and agricultural products.
- Establish new and enforceable rules to ensure that science-based SPS measures are
developed and implemented in a transparent, predictable, and non-discriminatory manner.
- Provide for a mechanism for improved dialogue and cooperation to address SPS issues and
facilitate trade where appropriate and possible.
- Build on and set high standards for implementation of WTO agreements involving trade
facilitation and customs valuation.
- Increase transparency by ensuring that all customs laws, regulations, and procedures are
published on the Internet as well as designating points of contact for questions from traders.
- Ensure that, to the greatest extent possible, shipments are released immediately after
determining compliance with applicable laws and regulations and provide for new disciplines
on timing of release, automation, and use of guarantees.
- Provide for streamlined and expedited customs treatment for express delivery shipments,
including for shipments above any de minimis threshold. Provide for a de minimis shipment
value comparable to the U.S. de minimis shipment value of $800.
- Ensure that NAFTA countries administer customs penalties in an impartial and transparent
manner, and avoid conflicts of interest in the administration of penalties.
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- Provide for automation of import, export, and transit processes, including through supply
chain integration; reduced import, export, and transit forms, documents, and formalities;
enhanced harmonization of customs data requirements; and advance rulings regarding the
treatment that will be provided to a good at the time of importation.
- Provide for electronic payment of duties, taxes, fees, and charges imposed on or in
connection with importation or exportation.
- Provide for the use of risk management systems for customs control and post-clearance audit
procedures to ensure compliance with customs and related laws.
- Provide for disciplines on the use of customs brokers, preshipment inspection, and the use of
reusable containers.
- Establish a committee for Parties to share information and cooperate on trade priorities with a
view to resolving inconsistent treatment of commercial goods.
Rules of Origin:
- Update and strengthen the rules of origin, as necessary, to ensure that the benefits of NAFTA
go to products genuinely made in the United States and North America.
- Ensure the rules of origin incentivize the sourcing of goods and materials from the United
States and North America.
- Establish origin procedures that streamline the certification and verification of rules of origin
and that promote strong enforcement, including with respect to textiles.
- Promote cooperation with NAFTA countries to ensure that goods that meet the rules of origin
receive NAFTA benefits, prevent duty evasion, and combat customs offences.
- Require NAFTA countries to apply decisions and recommendations adopted by the WTO
TBT Committee that apply, inter alia, to standards, conformity assessment, transparency, and
other areas.
- Include strong provisions on transparency and public consultation that require the NAFTA
countries to publish drafts of technical regulations and conformity assessment procedures,
allow stakeholders in other countries to provide comments on those drafts, and require
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authorities to address significant issues raised by stakeholders and explain how the final
measure achieves the stated objectives.
- Establish an active TBT Chapter Committee that will discuss bilateral and third party specific
trade concerns, coordination of regional and multilateral activities, regulatory cooperation,
and implementing Good Regulatory Practices.
- Obtain commitments that can facilitate market access and promote greater compatibility
among U.S., Canadian, and Mexican regulations, including by:
Promoting the use of impact assessments and other methods of ensuring regulations are
evidence-based and current, as well as avoiding unnecessary redundancies; and
Trade in Services:
- Secure commitments from NAFTA countries to provide fair and open conditions for services
trade, including through:
Rules that apply to all services sectors, including rules that prohibit:
Specialized sectoral disciplines, including rules to help level the playing field for U.S.
delivery services suppliers in the NAFTA countries; and
Where any exceptions from core disciplines are needed, the negotiation, on a negative list
basis, of the narrowest possible exceptions with the least possible impact on U.S. firms.
- Improve the transparency and predictability of the regulatory procedures in the NAFTA
countries.
Telecommunications:
Financial Services:
- Expand competitive market opportunities for United States financial service suppliers to
obtain fairer and more open conditions of financial services trade.
- Ensure that the NAFTA countries refrain from imposing measures in the financial services
sector that restrict cross-border data flows or that require the use or installation of local
computing facilities.
- Secure commitments not to impose customs duties on digital products (e.g., software, music,
video, e-books).
- Establish rules to ensure that NAFTA countries do not impose measures that restrict cross-
border data flows and do not require the use or installation of local computing facilities.
- Establish rules to prevent governments from mandating the disclosure of computer source
code.
Investment:
- Establish rules that reduce or eliminate barriers to U.S. investment in all sectors in the
NAFTA countries.
- Secure for U.S. investors in the NAFTA countries important rights consistent with U.S. legal
principles and practice, while ensuring that NAFTA country investors in the United States
are not accorded greater substantive rights than domestic investors.
Intellectual Property:
- Promote adequate and effective protection of intellectual property rights, including through
the following:
Provide strong protection and enforcement for new and emerging technologies and new
methods of transmitting and distributing products embodying intellectual property,
including in a manner that facilitates legitimate digital trade.
Ensure standards of protection and enforcement that keep pace with technological
developments, and in particular ensure that rightholders have the legal and technological
means to control the use of their works through the Internet and other global
communication media, and to prevent the unauthorized use of their works.
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- Secure fair, equitable, and nondiscriminatory market access opportunities for United States
persons that rely upon intellectual property protection.
- Respect the Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health, adopted by the World
Trade Organization at the Fourth Ministerial Conference at Doha, Qatar on November 14,
2001, and to ensure that trade agreements foster innovation and promote access to medicines.
- Prevent the undermining of market access for U.S. products through the improper use of a
countrys system for protecting or recognizing geographical indications, including failing to
ensure transparency and procedural fairness and protecting generic terms.
Transparency:
- Commit each Party to provide levels of transparency, participation, and accountability in the
development of regulations and other government decisions that are comparable to those
under U.S. law with respect to federal statutes and regulations. In particular, seek
commitments:
To provide adequate opportunities for stakeholder comment on measures before they are
adopted and finalized; and
To provide a sufficient period of time between final publication of measures and their
entry into force.
- Seek standards to ensure that government regulatory reimbursement regimes are transparent,
provide procedural fairness, are nondiscriminatory, and provide full market access for United
States products.
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- Retain the ability to support SOEs engaged in providing domestic public services.
- Ensure that SOEs accord non-discriminatory treatment with respect to purchase and sale of
goods and services.
- Ensure that SOEs act in accordance with commercial considerations with respect to such
purchases and sales.
- Ensure that strong subsidy disciplines apply to SOEs, beyond the disciplines set out in the
WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (SCM Agreement).
- Require that SOEs not cause harm to another Party through provision of subsidies.
- Require that SOEs not cause harm to the domestic industry of another Party via subsidized
SOE investment.
- Provide jurisdiction to courts over the commercial activities of foreign SOEs (i.e., limited
sovereign immunity).
- Allow Parties to request information related to the level of government ownership and
control of a given enterprise, and the extent of government support.
- Develop fact-finding mechanism based on Annex 5 of the WTO SCM Agreement to help
overcome the evidentiary problems associated with litigation on SOEs.
Competition Policy:
- Maintain rules that prohibit anticompetitive business conduct, as well as fraudulent and
deceptive commercial activities that harm consumers.
- Establish or affirm basic rules for procedural fairness on competition law enforcement.
Labor:
- Bring the labor provisions into the core of the Agreement rather than in a side agreement.
- Require NAFTA countries to adopt and maintain in their laws and practices the
internationally recognized core labor standards as recognized in the ILO Declaration,
including:
Freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining;
Effective abolition of child labor and a prohibition on the worst forms of child labor; and
- Require NAFTA countries to have laws governing acceptable conditions of work with
respect to minimum wages, hours of work, and occupational safety and health.
- Establish rules that will ensure that NAFTA countries do not waive or derogate from their
labor laws implementing internationally recognized core labor standards in a manner
affecting trade or investment between the parties.
- Establish rules that will ensure that NAFTA countries do not fail to effectively enforce their
labor laws implementing internationally recognized core labor standards and acceptable
conditions of work with respect to minimum wages, hours of work, and occupational safety
and health laws through a sustained or recurring course of action in a matter affecting trade
or investment between the parties.
- Require that NAFTA countries take initiatives to prohibit trade in goods produced by forced
labor, regardless of whether the source country is a NAFTA country.
- Provide access to fair, equitable, and transparent administrative and judicial proceedings.
- Ensure that these labor obligations are subject to the same dispute settlement mechanism that
applies to other enforceable obligations of the Agreement.
- Establish or maintain a senior-level Labor Committee, which will meet regularly to oversee
implementation of labor commitments, and include a mechanism for cooperation and
coordination on labor issues, including opportunities for stakeholder input in identifying
areas of cooperation.
Environment:
- Bring the environment provisions into the core of the Agreement rather than in a side
agreement.
- Establish strong and enforceable environment obligations that are subject to the same dispute
settlement mechanism that applies to other enforceable obligation of the Agreement.
- Establish rules that will ensure that NAFTA countries do not to waive or derogate from the
protections afforded in their environmental laws for the purpose of encouraging trade or
investment.
- Establish rules that will ensure that NAFTA countries do not fail to effectively enforce their
environment laws through a sustained or recurring course of action in a matter affecting trade
or investment between the parties.
- Require NAFTA countries to adopt and maintain measures implementing their obligations
under select Multilateral Environment Agreements (MEAs) to which the NAFTA countries
are full parties, including the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora.
- Establish a means for stakeholder participation, including commitments for public advisory
committees, and a process for the public to raise concerns directly with its government if they
believe it is not meeting its environment commitments.
- Require NAFTA countries to ensure access to fair, equitable and transparent administrative
and judicial proceedings for enforcing their environmental laws, and provide appropriate
sanctions or remedies for violations of their environmental laws.
- Provide for a framework for conducting, reviewing, and evaluating cooperative activities that
support implementation of the environment commitments, and for public participation in
these activities.
- Combat illegal fishing, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) including by implementing port
state measures and supporting increased monitoring and surveillance.
- Establish rules to prohibit harmful fisheries subsidies, such as those that contribute to
overfishing and IUU fishing, and pursue transparency in fisheries subsidies programs.
- Protect and conserve flora and fauna and ecosystems, including through action by countries
to combat wildlife trafficking, including timber trafficking.
Anti-Corruption:
- Secure provisions committing each Party to criminalize government corruption, to take steps
to discourage corruption, and to provide adequate penalties and enforcement tools in the
event of prosecution of persons suspected of engaging in corrupt activities. In particular by:
Requiring parties to disallow the deduction of corrupt payments for income tax purposes.
Trade Remedies:
- Preserve the ability of the United States to enforce rigorously its trade laws, including the
antidumping, countervailing duty, and safeguard laws.
- Eliminate the NAFTA global safeguard exclusion so that it does not restrict the ability of the
United States to apply measures in future investigations.
- Seek a separate domestic industry provision for perishable and seasonal products in AD/CVD
proceedings.
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- Promote cooperation among the trade remedies administrators of the NAFTA countries,
particularly with regards to the sharing of information that would improve the ability of
administrators to effectively monitor and address trade remedies violations, such as through
self-initiation.
- Strengthen existing procedures and create new procedures to address AD/CVD duty evasion,
including the ability to conduct AD/CVD verification visits.
- Establish transparency and due process obligations reflected in U.S. AD/CVD laws,
regulations, and practice.
- Establish an early warning import monitoring system for agreed sensitive products from non-
NAFTA countries.
Government Procurement:
- Increase opportunities for U.S. firms to sell U.S. products and services into the NAFTA
countries.
Ensuring sufficient time for suppliers to obtain tender documentation and submit bids;
Ensuring that contracts will be awarded based solely on the evaluation criteria specified
in the notices and tender documentation; and
- Exclude sub-federal coverage (state and local governments) from the commitments being
negotiated. Keep in place domestic preferential purchasing programs such as:
Preference programs for small businesses, women and minority owned businesses (which
includes Native Americans), service-disabled veterans, and distressed areas;
National security;
- Maintain ability to provide for labor, environmental, and other criteria to be included in
contracting requirements.
- Establish an SME Committee to ensure that the needs of SMEs are considered as the
Agreement is implemented in order for SMEs to benefit from new commercial opportunities.
Energy:
- Preserve and strengthen investment, market access, and state-owned enterprise disciplines
benefitting energy production and transmission and support North American energy security
and independence, while promoting continuing energy market-opening reforms.
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Dispute Settlement:
- Encourage the early identification and settlement of disputes through consultation and other
mechanisms.
- Establish a dispute settlement mechanism that is effective, timely, and in which panel
determinations are based on the provisions of the Agreement and the submissions of the
parties and are provided in a reasoned manner.
Ensuring that non-governmental entities have the right to request making written
submissions to a panel.
- Have provisions that encourage compliance with the obligations of the Agreement.
General Provisions:
- Include general exceptions that allow for the protection of legitimate U.S. domestic
objectives, including the protection of health or safety and essential security, among others.
Currency:
- Through an appropriate mechanism, ensure that the NAFTA countries avoid manipulating
exchange rates in order to prevent effective balance of payments adjustment or to gain an
unfair competitive advantage.