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Briefing Rooms

NAFTA, Canada, and Mexico

Contents
 

Overview

The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is a comprehensive trade liberalizing agreement among Canada, Mexico, and the United States. NAFTA progressively eliminated almost all tariff and quota barriers to trade among these countries over a transition period that began on January 1, 1994 and concluded on January 1, 2008. The agreement also facilitates cross-border investment, requires that sanitary and phytosanitary standards for trade be scientifically based, and expands cooperation regarding the environment and labor.

ERS is engaged in a wide range of research activities concerning NAFTA and its member countries. ERS is the principal USDA agency involved in the preparation of the Department's Congressionally mandated NAFTA report. ERS also conducts research about various NAFTA-related topics, such as the agreement's impact on specific sectors of the agricultural economy, ideas for furthering the integration of the member countries' agricultural sectors, and cross-border transportation issues.

Looking for information about the NAFTA Certificate of Origin? See the U.S. Government's Export Portal.

Features

A Comparison of Household Food Security in Canada and the United States (December 2008) examines differences in the prevalence of household-level food insecurity between the two countries for selected economic and demographic subpopulations. When the standard U.S. methodology for food insecurity is applied to 2004 data for Canada and 2003-05 data for the United States, the percentage of the population living in households classified as food insecure was lower in Canada (7.0 percent) than in the United States (12.6 percent).

NAFTA at 13: Implementation Nears Completion (March 2007) evaluates the impact of the NAFTA's impact as the agreement's implementation draws to a close. Just a handful of the agricultural trade restrictions scheduled to be phased out under NAFTA remain, and these are scheduled for elimination in 2008.  Once NAFTA is fully implemented, the member countries—Canada, Mexico, and the United States—will need to exercise their national autonomy, either individually or in concert, to achieve further integration of their agricultural markets.

 

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For more information, contact: Steven Zahniser

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Updated date: January 13, 2009