Latest News

Mexico cautions Trump's tariff would eliminate 400,000 United States jobs

Mexican Economy Minister Marcelo Ebrard said on Wednesday that a 25% acrosstheboard tariff proposed by U.S. Presidentelect Donald Trump would trigger the loss of 400,000 tasks and sluggish development in the United States, while also hitting Mexican exports.

It's a shot in the foot, he stated in a morning press conference, adding that Mexico wanted more local cooperation and integration instead of a war of retaliatory import taxes.

Ebrard said the proposed tariffs would strike the vehicle sector's leading cross-border export companies especially hard, specifically Ford, General Motors and Stellantis and push up lorry prices for customers by thousands of dollars.

Mexico is the United States' top trade partner and its automobile industry is the country's most important manufacturing sector, exporting generally to the United States. It represents almost 25% of all North American vehicle production.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum

called for discussion and cooperation

between the 2 trade partners on Tuesday, the early morning after Trump revealed the step which would appear to contravene an open market pact Trump signed during his last mandate.

She hinted Mexico would react with their own vindictive tariffs, while analysts speculated on the possibility of a brand-new trade war under Trump's next presidency.

Mexico's vehicle market group AMIA stated it would prepare for any possibility and wait to see what formal actions are taken.

The North American open market pact is up for modification in 2026.

(source: Reuters)