Source: REUTERS
Canada,
the United States and Mexico on Wednesday mounted a fierce defense of
free trade, vowing to deepen economic ties despite an increasingly
acrimonious debate about the value of globalization.
U.S.
President Barack Obama and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto also
took swipes at U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, who
has vowed to renegotiate or scrap the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) if he wins November's election.
"The
integration of national economies into a global economy: that's here,
that's done," Obama told a news conference at the end of a summit dubbed
the "Three Amigos".
"And
us trying to abandon the field and pull up the drawbridge around us is
going to be bad for us," he said after the talks, hosted by Canadian
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
Trump says free trade has been disastrous, costing thousands of U.S. jobs and depressing wages.
Similar
complaints were heard in Britain ahead of a surprise referendum vote
last week to leave the European Union and its free trade area.
Obama
and Pena Nieto stressed the importance of the relationship between
their countries, which has come under strain amid heated U.S. campaign
rhetoric.
"Isolationism cannot bring prosperity to a society," Pena Nieto said after bilateral talks with Obama.
"Hitler, Mussolini, we all know the result," he said when asked to explain the comparison. "It was only a call for reflection and for recognition, so that we bear in mind what we have achieved and the great deal still to achieve."
The summit, Trudeau's first and Obama's last, could be the final harmonious one between the three countries if Trump wins the White House in the November U.S. presidential election.
Trudeau,
who has generally steered clear of commenting on Trump's remarks since
taking power last November, said that regardless of rhetoric the three
nations would continue to have tremendously close relations.
Obama
has strongly criticized Trump in recent weeks and took aim at the
Republican's promises to clamp down on what he says is out-of-control
illegal immigration.
The United States, he
said, acknowledged public fears about the uncontrolled arrival of
foreigners and had worked hard to secure its borders.
"America
is a nation of immigrants. That is our strength ... The notion that we
would somehow stop now on what has been a tradition of attracting talent
and strivers and dreamers from all around the world, that would rob us
of the thing that is most special about America," he said.
Obama
- whose progressive social policies are very similar to Trudeau's -
later received a rapturous welcome when he addressed the Canadian
Parliament. In a speech often interrupted by prolonged applause, he said
he understood that some people had genuine concerns about the pace of
change.
"If
the benefits of globalization accrue only to those at the very top, if
our democracies seem incapable of assuring broad-based growth and
opportunity for everyone, then people will push back out of anger or out
of fear," he said.
"For those of us who
truly believe that our economies have to work for everybody, the answer
is not to try and pull back from our interconnected world. It is,
rather, to engage with the rest of the world, to shape the rules so
they're good for our workers and good for our businesses."
Protests
over immigration have also been seen in Britain in the wake of the
so-called Brexit vote last week, which at one point wiped more than $2
trillion off global equity markets.
Obama
said he expected the world economy would be steady in the short run but
expressed longer term concerns about global growth if Brexit went
ahead.
Trump
also opposes the 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership, which was signed
in February but may not be ratified by the United States given
increasing domestic resistance. Obama said on Wednesday he was committed
to ensuring the pact contained high labor and trade standards.
One
obstacle to free trade is the dumping of products at artificially low
prices, and Trudeau, Obama and Pena Nieto said they agreed on the need
for the governments of all major steel-making nations to address excess
capacity.
The three also pledged to produce 50 percent of their nations' electricity from clean energy by 2025.
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