IB Assignment 2 - Short Notes
IB Assignment 2 - Short Notes
IB Assignment 2 - Short Notes
Project Assignment 2
Answer –
Through NAFTA, the three signatories agree to remove trade barriers between them. By eliminating
tariffs, NAFTA increases investment opportunities. The NAFTA agreement is 2,000 pages, with eight
sections and 22 chapters.
On November 30, 2018, the United States, Mexico, and Canada renegotiated the North American
Free Trade Agreement. The new deal is called the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement. It must
be ratified by each country's legislature. The implementation act passed the House in December
2019, the Senate on Jan. 16, 2020, and signed by Trump on Jan. 29, 2020. It was ratified in Mexico in
2019. Ratification is pending in Canada. Until the USMCA is ratified, NAFTA remains in effect. The
Trump administration wanted to lower the trade deficit between the United States and Mexico.
The new deal changes NAFTA in six areas -
Included in the USMCA agreement, sometimes colloquially referred to as NAFTA 2.0, are:
Allowing American farmers access to American dairy products, which had previously been
more restricted
Automobiles must have at least 75% of its components made in the United States, Canada or
Mexico, an increase from NAFTA's requirements of 62.5%
By 2023, 40-45% of automobile components must be made by North American workers
making at least $16 an hour.
The terms of copyright increase to 70 years after the life of the author, an increase from the
current limit of 50 years after the life of the author
Prohibition on duties for products like music or e-books purchased electronically
Scrapping parts of Chapter 11, the NAFTA provision also known as the Investors-State
Dispute Settlement (ISDS) that allowed investors of companies to sue governments
There is also A "sunset" clause, in which the terms of the agreement expire after 16 years. The
USMCA would be reviewed every 6 years, during which it can be extended for another 16-year term.
While the leaders of all 3 countries have signed the agreement, it cannot go into effect until the
governments of all 3 countries pass it. However, the United States has yet to pass the USMCA as a
bill. House Democrats have urged additions to the USMCA that, among other things, strengthen
labor laws and add environmental protections.
3. EU – European Union:
The most prominent development in the field of economic integration has been the organisation of
European Economic Community (EEC) now known as European Union (EU). Initially it was called
European Common Market (ECM). It was formed on January 1, 1958 based on the Treaty of Rome
signed in March 1957 by the countries like W. Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, Netherlands and
Luxembourg.
Starting with six member countries, its membership increased to nine when the United Kingdom,
Denmark and Ireland joined it in 1973.
Subsequently, Greece joined it in 1981, followed by Spain and Portugal in 1986. During 1990’s, the
membership of EU had risen to 15 with some African, Caribbean and Pacific region countries having
its associate membership. On May 1, 2004 there was enlargement of European Union (EU) with the
joining of 10 new member countries.
With this the membership of EU has risen to 25. The new member countries include Czech Republic,
Estonia, Hungary, Slovak Republic, Malta, Cyprus, Poland, and Lithuania. Latvia and Slovania.
Presently, the membership of the EU stands at 28. The estimated GNP of the enlarged EU would be
around Euro 9,712 billion with a population more than 455 million. The enlarged EU would represent
20 percent of the world trade, 26 per cent of foreign direct investment and 46 percent of the total
outbound investments. As a matter of fact, EU would become the largest trading block in the world.
The Intra-EU trade would be over twice of what it would have been in the absence of integration.
The EEC had been created based on the Treaty of Rome which specified its objective. So, under the
Treaty of Rome, the member countries of EEC are committed to:
The abolition of tariff and non-tariff quantitative and other restrictions regarding the
import and export of goods between the member states.
The abolition of all restrictions upon the free movement of persons, services and capital
between the member states.
The establishment of common customs tariff and of a common commercial policy
towards the non-member countries.
The establishment of a common farm policy.
The adoption of a common policy in the sphere of transport.
The establishment of a system ensuring that competition shall not be distorted in the
common market.
The application of the procedures for ensuring the co-ordination of the economic
policies of the member states and for remedying their balance of payments disequilibria.
The creation of a European Social Fund for improving the possibilities of employment for
the workers and for ensuring a rise in their standard of living.
The establishment of a European Investment Bank to facilitate the economic expansion
of the community by opening fresh resources.
The approximation of the legislations of the member states to the extent necessary for
the efficient functioning of the common market.
It follows from the above that the fundamental objectives which the EEC sought to realise include
the elimination of all restrictions from the free movement of goods, labour, capital and services,
maintenance of common external tariffs against the non-member countries, the establishment of
common policies in the spheres of transport and agriculture and closer integration in the fields of
monetary and fiscal matters in the entire region.
By,
Aishwarya Bawa
27/059
Section B