Commentary
Mexico could be pulling away from China.
Impending U.S. trade negotiations, sentiment in Washington, the campaign season, concern in Mexico over the trade deficit with China, and increasingly tough U.S. rules on importing Chinese cars and parts are causing politicians south of the border to rethink commercial relations with the world’s second-largest economy.
Sometimes, the flag follows trade rather than the other way around. If trade moves away from China, the flag probably will, too.
Mexico’s deputy trade minister, Luis Rosendo Gutiérrez, spoke with The Wall Street Journal for the report. He said Mexico is asking U.S. companies—including manufacturers of autos, semiconductors, aerospace, and electronics—to assist the development of Mexican industries that would produce substitutes for imports from China, Taiwan, Vietnam, and Malaysia.
Ramirez noted that Mexico imports $119 billion of goods from China annually, while only exporting $11 billion back.
And the United States is increasing its pressure on Mexico to move further away from Beijing. Trade negotiations in 2025 could result in a minimum percentage of North American content before an import is accepted by the United States as tariff-free.
Given the impact of U.S. national security policies on Mexico, the country should anticipate new U.S. laws on China and distance itself from the CCP and other authoritarian regimes. Americans are disentangling our own strategic supply lines from China, which should also apply to Chinese products transshipped across the Rio Grande. The new administration in Mexico City now has a choice. Let’s encourage the right one.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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