Mexico and Argentina sign automotive agreement

Wednesday, 18 March 2015 00:44:11 (GMT+3)   |  

Representatives from the Argentinian and Mexican governments signed Tuesday a four-year agreement for the automotive sector in Mexico City, the Mexican government said. The agreement would exempt light vehicle and auto part exports from both countries from paying taxes.

Under the deal, both countries will have an export quota of $575 million, which starts on March 19 and will gradually increase to $638 million during the last year of the agreement—March 2018 to March 2019.

Both countries have committed themselves to keep domestic auto production limited to 35 percent of the market. That level should increase to 40 percent in 2019.

Recently, Mexico signed a similar deal with Brazil, which set minimum shares of Brazilian and Argentine automobiles in each country. Brazil would need to have a minimum share of 44.3 percent of cars in Argentina, and Argentina an 11 percent share in the Brazilian market.

 


Similar articles

Mexico and Argentina to deepen economic ties

16 Feb | Steel News

US HRC spot prices softening despite firm CRC market

28 Sep | Flats and Slab

US flats prices stabilizing as domestic mills gain increasing price control

01 Jun | Flats and Slab

US flats market seeing more optimism as inventories continue to shrink

25 May | Flats and Slab

The global steel market is changing right before our eyes

02 Feb | Steel Matters

Brazil’s finished steel trade deficit narrows on antidumping measures

22 May | Steel News

US flat steel prices continue up as bullish drivers propel HRC futures through Q4

22 May | Flats and Slab

Mexican domestic scrap prices remain flat this week, rumors of some buyers coming back to the market

22 May | Scrap & Raw Materials

US import long steel prices stable on week as markets wait on latest peace deal with Iran

22 May | Longs and Billet

Daily iron ore prices CFR China - May 22, 2026

22 May | Scrap & Raw Materials