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EU-Mexico Trade Agreement

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  • Mexico
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  • Negotiations and agreements

The European Union and Mexico have reached an "agreement in principle" on the main trade parts of a new EU-Mexico Trade Agreement. The new agreement replaces a previous deal between the EU and Mexico from 2000. Trade relations between the EU and Mexico are governed by the trade pillar of the 2000 agreement, known as EU-Mexico Economic Partnership, Political Coordination and Cooperation Agreement (also referred to as the 'Global Agreement')

The original agreement brought many trade benefits to the EU and Mexico, though some trade barriers still remain.

The new deal will:

  • scrap high Mexican tariffs on European food and drinks;
  • allow EU firms to sell more services to Mexico, and;
  • pledge to protect workers' rights and the environment.

Negotiations with Mexico started in May 2016 and both sides reached an agreement in principle on the trade part in April 2018.

The new agreement, once ratified, will replace the existing EU-Mexico Global Agreement, which entered into force in 2000.

About the agreement

Negotiation round reports and textual proposals

EU-Mexico trade in your town

A branch of the Coffeeshop Company

The Austrian Coffeeshop Company has over 300 franchises worldwide. The company’s international expansion was also possible thanks to the EU’s trade agreements with countries such as Mexico, Morocco, and Egypt, which reduced much of the administrative work needed to enter those markets.

More on Trade relations

EU trade relations with Mexico.

Exporting from the EU, importing into the EU — all you need to know is on the Access2Markets portal

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