Nafta
Nafta
Nafta
Standards
• The agreement opened the door for free trade, ending tariffs on
various goods and services, and implementing equality between
Canada, USA, and Mexico.
• Free trade increases sales and profits for Mexico, Canada and
the U.S.A., thus strengthening their economies.
• Lack of tariffs has allowed Mexico to sell its goods in the USA
and Canada at lower prices.
• This makes Mexican products more competitive in these
markets and increases Mexico’s profits as it tries to develop its
economy.
• Free trade is an opportunity for the U.S. to provide financial
help to Mexico by making jobs available in factories located
there.
• Free trade has caused more U.S. job losses than gains, especially for
higher-wage jobs.
• People work for lower wages and there are fewer labor regulations in
Mexico, so American factories have moved across the border.
• Factories, called Maquiladoras, are built on the Mexican border and
workers are hired there to make goods at a much lower wage than
workers would be paid in the U.S.A.
• Mexico does not have as strict environmental regulations like Canada &
U.S., so when factories move across the border, they are contributing to
North America’s pollution problem.
• Some argue that our borders should be open like the EU does in Europe.
• That makes some people angry because they feel the borders should
be closed.
American business owners have enjoyed many benefits from
NAFTA:
• They can move their factories to Mexico and ship the goods to
the US with no tariffs.
• They do not have to pay the workers in Mexico as much as in
the United States.
• There are not as many labor and environmental regulations
for factories in Mexico.
• They can sell their product for cheaper, but still make a good
profit.
• They have a greater area to sell their product in.
• Most Mexican business owners have mixed feelings about
NAFTA.
• I teach Language Arts and Social Studies in Georgia, so my products are aligned
with Common Core (LA) and Georgia Performance Standards (SS).
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