US President Donald Trump will sign the new North American trade pact with Mexico and Canada next week, a White House official said Thursday.
The USMCA, the fruit of years of negotiation between the three key trading partners, is billed as an update to the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement, which Trump had long lambasted as a job killer and threatened to scrap outright.
The US Senate approved the pact last week and White House officials said Trump will sign it Wednesday.
The earlier NAFTA created a vast free-trade zone across North America, leading to radical shifts in the makeup of industries in the three countries and vastly increasing cross-border exchanges in goods, services and people.
While the agreement produced winners and losers in some areas, economists say overall it increased growth and raised the standard of living in North America.
The new deal changes content rules on auto manufacturing and requires higher salaries for some Mexican auto workers.
More From This Section
It also makes changes to e-commerce, intellectual property protections and dispute settlement for investors, as well as tougher labor provisions that require reforms to Mexico's labor laws.
Mexico ratified the new agreement December 10, and Canada is expected to follow suit in coming weeks.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content