Donald Trump is adopting an organized approach to commercial negotiations with about 18 countries over the next two months, using a new model prepared by the US Trade Representative Office (USTR).
The aim is to expedite negotiations on mutual definitions called, with a structure that covers wide categories such as customs tariffs, shares, non -sharp barriers, digital trade, and the rules of origins of products and economics and safety issues.
According to the sources, negotiations will take place in three weekly sessions, with six countries discussing issues every week, after a schedule that will be repeated until the deadline of the self -time on July 8.
A USTR spokeswoman said: “Ustr works under an organized and strict structure and progresses quickly with disposable business partners,” a USTR spokeswoman said. “President Trump and Ustr have goals for us, and our work partners have a good idea of what they can present individually.”
Some countries, such as Mexico, Canada and China, are likely to follow different commercial paths due to current agreements or definitions. In particular, China was a 145 % additional target, and although Trump announced the maintenance of daily contact with Beijing, the Chinese authorities have denied significant negotiations so far.
Meanwhile, the European Union and other commercial partners are seeking to define its own standards of conversations, with the European Union clarifying that it will not negotiate changes in the value -added tax system or agricultural support. The UK has sought to remove any changes in food or cars safety standards, saying these are decisions from his government.