NAFTA - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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NAFTA

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... NAFTA has proven its value as a means of stimulating trade, investment and competitiveness. We now have an opportunity to replicate the success of the NAFTA, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: NAFTA


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NAFTA
  • Do we need this policy?

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Maquiladora?
  • There was a man who raised grain. After he would
    harvest the grain, he would take it to the miller
    who would grind it. The miller would keep a
    portion of the grain as payment for grinding it.
    This was called a maquil.
  • The second part of the word dora means
    association/corporation.

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History of Trade Agreements
  • The European Union is the world's largest
    confederation of independent states, established
    under that name in 1992. However, many aspects of
    the Union existed before that date through a
    series of predecessor relationships, dating back
    to 1951.
  • The Free Trade Agreement (FTA) was a trade
    agreement reached by Canada and the United States
    in October 1987.
  • The North American Free Trade Agreement is a free
    trade agreement among Canada, the United States
    of America, and Mexico, NAFTA went into effect on
    January 1, 1994.
  • Originally, the agreement encompassed the United
    States and the Central American countries of
    Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and
    Nicaragua, and was called CAFTA. In 2004, the
    Dominican Republic joined the negotiations, and
    the agreement was renamed DR-CAFTA.
  • Mercosur or Mercosul is a customs union between
    Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay and
    Venezuela, founded in 1991 by the Treaty of
    Asunción, which was later amended and updated by
    the 1994 Treaty of Ouro Preto.

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What would NAFTA do for our country and other
countries?
  • Simple idea
  • NAFTA called for immediately eliminating duties
    on half of all U.S. goods shipped to Mexico and
    Canada, and gradually phasing out other tariffs
    over a period of about 14 years.

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NAFTA promoters
  • - including many of the worlds largest
    corporations - promised it would create hundreds
    of thousands of new high-wage U.S. jobs, raise
    living standards in the U.S., Mexico and Canada,
    improve environmental conditions and transform
    Mexico from a poor developing country into a
    booming new market for U.S. exports.

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Good things about NAFTA
  • Economic studies have indicated that rather than
    creating an actual increased trade, NAFTA has
    caused trade diversion, in which the NAFTA
    members now import more from each other at the
    expense of other countries worldwide. Some
    economists argue that NAFTA has increased
    concentration of wealth in both Mexico and the
    United States. After the signing of NAFTA, trade
    between the nations have soared dramatically,
    with trade between the United States and Mexico
    doubling. 1
  • More jobs!!!!!!!!

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NAFTA opponents
  • including labor, environmental, consumer and
    religious groups - argued that NAFTA would launch
    a race-to-the-bottom in wages, destroy hundreds
    of thousands of good U.S. jobs, undermine
    democratic control of domestic policy-making and
    threaten health, environmental and food safety
    standards.
  • http//www.citizen.org/trade/nafta/

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Bad things about NAFTA
  • NAFTA has been controversial since it was first
    proposed. Transnational corporations have tended
    to support NAFTA in the belief that lower tariffs
    would increase their profits. Labor unions in
    Canada and the United States have opposed NAFTA
    for fear that jobs would move out of the country
    due to lower labor costs in Mexico. Some
    politicians have opposed free trade for fear that
    it will turn countries, such as Canada, into
    permanent branch plant economies. Farmers in
    Mexico have opposed and still oppose NAFTA
    because the heavy agriculture subsidies for
    farmers in the United States have put a great
    deal of downward pressure on Mexican agricultural
    prices, forcing many farmers out of business.
    Wages there have decreased by as much as 20
    percent in some sectors.
  • Jobs lose!!!!!!

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List of multinational corporations
  • British Petroleum
  • The Coca-Cola Company
  • DaimlerChrysler AG
  • General Electric
  • Honda Motor Company
  • International Business Machines
  • McDonalds Corporation
  • Microsoft Corporation
  • Nintendo Company, Limited
  • Intel Corporation
  • Nokia Corporation
  • Siemens AG
  • Sony Corporation
  • Texas Instruments
  • Toyota Motor Corporation
  • Wal-Mart Stores, Inc

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Why such divergent views?
  • NAFTA was a radical experiment - never before had
    a merger of three nations with such radically
    different levels of development been attempted.
    Plus, until NAFTA, trade agreements only dealt
    with cutting tariffs and lifting quotas to set
    the terms of trade in goods between countries.
    But NAFTA contained 900 pages of
    one-size-fits-all rules to which each nation was
    required to conform all of its domestic laws -
    regardless of whether voters and their
    democratically-elected representatives had
    previously rejected the very same policies in
    Congress, state legislatures or city councils.
  • http//www.citizen.org/trade/nafta/

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NAFTA A Treaty, a Foundation, a Past, a
Future...Stories of the Week - June 23, 2003
  • http//www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/nafta-alena/stories64
    -en.asp
  • Some ten years later, trade between Canada, the
    United States and Mexico is faring quite well.
    Trade in goods and services between Canada and
    the United States is worth around 2 billion per
    day.
  • Similarly, Canadian exports to Mexico have
    doubled and imports of Mexican products to Canada
    have tripled during this time.
  • NAFTA has definitely helped raise the quality of
    life of Canadians and created business
    opportunities for Canadian companies in the
    United States and Mexico.
  • What is more, NAFTA has proven its value as a
    means of stimulating trade, investment and
    competitiveness. We now have an opportunity to
    replicate the success of the NAFTA, this time in
    a hemispheric context, through the Free Trade
    Area of the Americas (FTAA).

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Revisiting NAFTAStill not working for North
America's workers
  • http//www.epi.org/content.cfm/bp173
  • As a former foreign minister of Mexico once
    remarked, NAFTA was an agreement for the rich
    and powerful in the United States, Mexico, and
    Canada, an agreement effectively excluding
    ordinary people in all three societies. It
    should, therefore, be no surprise that NAFTA
    rules protect the interests of large corporate
    investors while undercutting workers rights,
    environmental protections, and democratic
    accountability.
  • Twelve years later, it is clear that the costs to
    workers outweighed the benefits in all three
    nations.
  • Americans were promised that NAFTA would generate
    large numbers of net new good jobs. Instead, over
    a million jobs that would otherwise have been
    created were lost, and wages were pressured
    downward for a large number of workers with less
    than a college education.
  • Mexican employment did increase, but much of it
    in low-wage maquiladora industries, which the
    promoters of NAFTA promised would disappear. The
    agricultural sector was devastated

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The U.S Mexico is divided by large geographical
features.
  • Water sources
  • Topography
  • Climate
  • The U.S/Mexico border is the longest border in
    the world that divides a developed country and an
    undeveloped country.
  • Developed
  • Undeveloped

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Identify problems that exist between the U.S.
(especially Texas) Mexico.
  • Illegal immigration
  • Overpopulation
  • Poverty
  • Debt
  • Low income
  • Discrimination
  • Language barrier
  • Value of peso compared to the dollar

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Mexico U.S. Facts
  • Minimum wage law prevents industries from hiring
    good workers for less then 5.15.
  • Other company will hire cheaper labor to create
    good products that cost less.
  • Cannot hire illegal workers. Cannot pay them less
    than minimum wage.
  • Large labor pool in Mexico not accessible due to
    a Mexican regulation that prevents full ownership
    of a company if located in Mexico.
  • 21 million people live in Mexico City. Largest
    city in the world.
  • Problems water supply, garbage disposal, sewage,
    fire protection, air pollution, housing, etc.
  • Debt. over 100 billion
  • 85 million Mexicans are under age 16.
  • High unemployment in Mexico.
  • Fraud corruption in politics business.

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Wages of the U.S.
  • Green States with minimum wage rates higher
    than the Federal
  •  Yellow States with no minimum wage law Blue
    States with minimum wage rates the same as the
    Federal
  •  Red States with minimum wage rates lower than
    the Federal American Samoa has special minimum
    wage rates 
  •  

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What can Mexico do to
  • Provide jobs for its own citizens?
  • Think about some of the problems that we discuss.
  • How would you satisfy the U.S. private
    industries great demand for good, but cheap,
    labor.

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