Showing posts with label mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mexico. Show all posts
Monday, February 8, 2016
The US successfully delayed the WTO’s approval of $1 billion in retaliatory tariffs
The US successfully delayed the WTO’s approval of $1 billion in retaliatory tariffs
by David Yanofsky
The World Trade Organization has already given Canada and Mexico the nod to levy $1 billion in retaliatory tariffs against the United States for requiring that all meat sold in the country be labeled by its country of origin. But it didn't finish dotting the i's and crossing the t's on the permission slip.
That work had been scheduled to occur (Dec. 18) at a meeting of the WTO
. Only the US used a procedural move to block it from happening, by arguing that the requisite body of the WTO should not be able to meet while the WTO's ministerial conference is taking place in Nairobi.
The action unleashed a flurry of diplomatic responses, described thusly by someone privy to the reactions. This person requested anonymity to be able to freely share the stances, which are typically taken privately.
Canada and Mexico, which of course stand to directly benefit from the tariffs, are disappointed in the US’s actions and say the meeting-
delay maneuver is an effort to meddle in the WTO’s finalization of the retaliatory tariffs.
The EU delegation supported the position of Canada and Mexico, and described the move by the US as "very worrying," according to our source.
Australia expressed concern about creating a precedent for blocking WTO business procedurally and asked the US to reflect on its implications.
And New Zealand supported the position of both Australia and the EU.
The tactic gave the US just a few more days to come up with its next procedural move, try another diplomatic tact, or perhaps find a better PR moment.
The Real Style ---NP---2016
Labels:
Australia,
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canada,
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tariff,
Tariffs,
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US,
WTO
The innovative ways that drivers hope to beat some of the strictest traffic laws on Earth
The innovative ways that drivers hope to beat some of the strictest traffic laws on Earth
by Ana Campoy
Mexico City is rolling out its new traffic rulebook, a 124-page document (pdf, link in Spanish) with the ambitious goal of taming the megalopolis’s unruly drivers.
Starting Dec. 15, residents in the car-centric city are subject to strict new standards that give priority to pedestrians and cyclists, and heavily penalize drivers who break the rules. Traffic fines went up significantly—some are now more than 30 times the daily minimum wage.
In addition to punishing common traffic offenses, the city also is now fining uncivil driving behavior. Laying on the horn costs up to 700 pesos (around $40); yelling obscenities out the window, more than 2,000 pesos.
More than 10,000 cameras and radars (Spanish) have been installed throughout the city to enforce the new rules. But Mexico City’s ever-inventive residents are already finding ways to cheat the system. And this has spawned a market for tools to obscure license plates.
Placa Fantasma (Spanish), or phantom plate, offers night and daytime solutions, which it sells for 700 pesos each under the motto “Live without rush. Live calmly.” The company says a few applications of its spray on a license plate will cause traffic-camera pictures taken with a flash to be overexposed. A transparent plastic cover that’s installed over the plate blurs the numbers for the camera, but not to the human eye, it says.
A company salesperson told Mexican newspaper Milenio there’s been a surge in demand (Spanish) for its products as the city implements the new system. On its website, the firm says deliveries will take more than a week to fulfill due to the high volume of orders.
Other drivers are obscuring their plates with a 349-peso slatted cover, or with special stickers that go over plate’s letters and numbers, rendering them unreadable for cameras; those sell for 300 pesos.
There’s also a remote-controlled plate holder that lowers a black shield, completely blocking the plate numbers from the camera’s view. But at nearly $2,700, that’s a luxury only a few drivers can afford.
The head of the city’s government, Miguel Angel Mancera, has warned those who try to cheat the system that they will be tracked down and punished. That's a tall order, considering the city’s has more than 4.5 million registered cars.
The Real Style ---NP---2016
Labels:
cars,
Government,
latin america,
mexico,
Mexico City,
mexico city drivers,
policy,
regulation,
road rage,
traffic,
traffic camera,
traffic f
Location:
United States
Thursday, December 24, 2015
The US successfully delayed the WTO’s approval of $1 billion in retaliatory tariffs
The US successfully delayed the WTO’s approval of $1 billion in retaliatory tariffs
The World Trade Organization has already given Canada and Mexico the nod to levy $1 billion in retaliatory tariffs against the United States for requiring that all meat sold in the country be labeled by its country of origin. But it didn't finish dotting the i's and crossing the t's on the permission slip.That work had been scheduled to occur (Dec. 18) at a meeting of the WTO. Only the US used a procedural move to block it from happening, by arguing that the requisite body of the WTO should not be able to meet while the WTO's ministerial conference is taking place in Nairobi.
The action unleashed a flurry of diplomatic responses, described thusly by someone privy to the reactions. This person requested anonymity to be able to freely share the stances, which are typically taken privately.
Canada and Mexico, which of course stand to directly benefit from the tariffs, are disappointed in the US’s actions and say the meeting-delay maneuver is an effort to meddle in the WTO’s finalization of the retaliatory tariffs.
The EU delegation supported the position of Canada and Mexico, and described the move by the US as "very worrying," according to our source.
Australia expressed concern about creating a precedent for blocking WTO business procedurally and asked the US to reflect on its implications.
And New Zealand supported the position of both Australia and the EU.
The tactic gave the US just a few more days to come up with its next procedural move, try another diplomatic tact, or perhaps find a better PR moment. The issue is now scheduled to be taken up on Monday, Dec. 21.
by David Yanofsky
Real-Style-------Today
Labels:
Australia,
beef,
canada,
chicken,
cool,
country of origin labeling,
diplomacy,
graphic,
meat,
mexico,
new zealand,
pork,
QuartzThings,
retaliatory tariffs,
tariff,
Tariffs,
trade,
US,
WTO.
Location:
United States
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