President Donald Trump speaks as he announces a revamped North American free trade deal, in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. (AP Photo / Pablo Martinez Monsivais) By signing up, you ...
NAFTA 2.0 negotiations begin this week in Washington. The hoped-for conclusion will not be as quick as some want, nor take as long as some observers predict. But a long list of policy hurdles is ...
After more than a year of sometimes contentious negotiations, the United States, Mexico, and Canada reached an agreement on September 30 to revise the North American Free Trade Agreement ...
Peter Singer Criticizes Pope Leo’s Encyclical for Embracing Human Exceptionalism Russia Is Losing Its War, and Congress Should Help Finish the Job The Mainechurian Candidate The Associated Press Asks: ...
Donald Trump was right when he said that the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) has been a disaster for the United States and promised to renegotiate it when he became president. However, the ...
Ongoing negotiations to rewrite the North American Free Trade Agreement remain bogged down, but even if U.S., Canadian and Mexican trade ministers strike a deal in the coming weeks, Congress may not ...
After the U.S., Canada, and Mexico agreed to a new trade deal to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) late Sunday night, Trump heralded the new deal as “truly historic news for our ...
Editor’s note: The text for the new trade agreement, named the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), was released on September 30. NAFTA 2.0 is coming out this week and there’s still a lot of ...
Congress passed the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) almost unanimously. It contains improvements over the original NAFTA, but still puts corporate interests over those of ordinary citizens, says ...
NAFTA is no more. The North American Free Trade Agreement has a new name — the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA — and its rules have been updated and revamped. For Mexico, there's one ...
China gets a lot of attention when it comes to global trade, so you might not realize that Indiana’s top international markets are much closer to home: Canada and Mexico. Berger “A lot of that’s tied ...
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