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In: NAFTA law and policy series 2
Introduction - Volume 2 /Seymour J. Rubin and Dean C. Alexander --NAFTA and Investment - A Canadian Perspective /by Tim Kennish --The Transformation of the Maquiladora Under the North American Free Trade Agreement /Preston Brown and Carolyn Karr --Mexico's Foreign Investment Law of 1993, Amendments to the Maquila Decree, and an Overview of Maquiladoras /Dean C. Alexander --Foreign Investment in Mexico Under NAFTA /Jorge Luis Ramos Uriarte --A Critical Analysis of the Post-1994 Elections: Mexican Foreign Investment Regulatory Scheme /Dr. Jorge Witker and Rich Robins --The Likely Impact of NAFTA on Investment in Selected Goods and Services Sectors in Mexico, Canada, and the U.S. /Dean C. Alexander --The Role of Multilateral Investments Guarantee Agency (MIGA) in Attracting Foreign Investments to Latin America /Luis Dodero --The Institutional Bases of the Economic Model and the Treatment of Foreign Investment in Chile /Roberto L. Mayorga --Selected United States-Mexico-Canada Cross-Border Investment and Trade Deals: 1992-1993 /Kent S. Foster and Dean C. Alexander --Selected United States-Mexico-Canada Cross-Border Investment and Trade Deals: 1994 /Dean C. Alexander --Text of the Investment Chapter of NAFTA --Bibliography NAFTA and Investment /Dean C. Alexander.
In: Management report for nonunion organizations, Band 18, Heft 7, S. 2-2
ISSN: 1530-8286
In: FP, S. 91-114
ISSN: 0015-7228
Reform Mexico first, by Ernest F. Hollings; Prescription for growth, by Gary Clyde Hufbauer and Jeffrey J. Schott.
World Affairs Online
In: Foreign affairs: an American quarterly review, Band 72, Heft 5, S. 160
ISSN: 2327-7793
In: Mirovaja ėkonomika i meždunarodnye otnošenija: MĖMO, Heft 7, S. 41-52
2014 marked the 20th anniversary of the entry into force of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which created the world's largest free trade area. Now it links 470 million people producing more than 19 trillion USD worth of goods and services. The article addresses five issues: the international importance of NAFTA; the economic transformation that has occurred in the USA, Canada and Mexico since the advent of the NAFTA; a "thought experiment" on what American, Canadian and Mexican performance might have been without the NAFTA; the detrimental effect of 9/11 on the North American economic integration; and what's next? At the time of its signing, NAFTA in many ways was considered a "gold standard" in terms of international free trade agreements. For the first time ever a free trade agreement brought together both developed and developing countries. It also broadened the scope of traditional FTAs by embracing services, foreign investments and property rights, and recognized the importance of workers' and environmental rights and issues. In terms of trade and investment NAFTA has been an undisputed success. Canada ranks as the United States' largest export market, while Mexico is its second-largest export market. Today – thanks to NAFTA – North Americans not only sell more goods to one another, they also make more things together. For every dollar of goods that Canada and Mexico export to the USA, there are 25 cents' worth of US inputs into Canadian goods and 40 cents' worth into Mexican ones. Regardless of the impressive economic record, NAFTA has its critics. The agreement has not underwent a major update since its inception in 1994, i.e. prior to the rise of electronic commerce and, digital services, advanced manufacturing and many other innovative features of the global economy. As far as there is no political appetite to update NAFTA directly, indirect route is a subject of wide speculation. Canada, the USA and Mexico are negotiating partners to the Trans-Pacific Partnership and any benefits conferred by the TPP that go further than NAFTA would take precedence. It is assumed that the TPP should help to modernize NAFTA commitments and upgrade the North American trade and investment.
SSRN
Mit der Wahl des US-amerikanischen Präsidenten ist das 1994 in Kraft getretene Nordamerikanische Freihandelsabkommen (NAFTA) zurück auf die Agenda der Handelspolitik gelangt. Auf Druck der USA fanden am 16. August 2017 die ersten Gespräche zwischen den NAFTA-Vertragspartnern USA, Kanada und Mexiko über eine Neugestaltung des Abkommens statt. Noch vor den mexikanischen Präsidentschaftswahlen im Juli 2018 sollen die Gespräche zu einem vorläufigen Abschluss führen, eine Einigung wird aber tatsächlich wohl weitaus mehr Zeit in Anspruch nehmen. ; With the election of a new president in the US, the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is back on the international t rade policy agenda. This article sets out US motivations to push for a renegotiation and examines the pros and cons of renegotiating the agreement. While there are good reasons to update NAFTA, a new agreement or even a US withdrawal from the treaty will not meet the expectations raised in President Trump's election campaign.
BASE