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NAFTA 20 Years Later

Adam Posen, Gary Clyde Hufbauer (), Cathleen Cimino (), Tyler Moran (), Jaana Remes, Theodore Moran, Lindsay Oldenski, Barbara Kotschwar, Jeffrey J. Schott (), Thomas F. McLarty and Eduardo M. Mora
Additional contact information
Gary Clyde Hufbauer: Peterson Institute for International Economics
Cathleen Cimino: Peterson Institute for International Economics
Tyler Moran: Peterson Institute for International Economics
Jaana Remes: McKinsey Global Institute
Jeffrey J. Schott: Peterson Institute for International Economics
Thomas F. McLarty: McLarty Associates
Eduardo M. Mora: Ambassador of Mexico to the United States

No PIIEB14-3 in PIIE Briefings from Peterson Institute for International Economics

Abstract: Enactment of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) among the United States, Mexico, and Canada 20 years ago advanced economic integration and started a public debate running to today about the merits of trade agreements in the era of globalization. As the first major trade accord between two wealthy countries and a relatively poor country, NAFTA created enormous opportunities in all three economies while generating anxieties about job losses and other kinds of displacement. Mexico and the United States have clearly reaped great gains at the aggregate level from their more open trading and investment relationship, but NAFTA is frequently invoked as a job-killing precedent by opponents of further US trade agreements with poorer countries. On July 15, 2014, the Peterson Institute for International Economics convened a conference, "Mexico and the United States: Building on the Benefits of NAFTA," to assess both benefits and costs derived from this important trade accord. In addition, the Institute's president, Adam S. Posen, has summarized his view of the impact in an op-ed essay. This report, part of a new series of publications called PIIE Briefings, collects recent writings by PIIE scholars on NAFTA, including some previously published papers and the transcript of the NAFTA conference. The Institute is proud that these papers and presentations are in keeping with our customary intellectual rigor, objectivity, and research-based conclusions.

Date: Written 2014-11
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