September 8, 2021
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Mexican foreign minister Marcelo Ebrard said on Wednesday that upcoming high-level economic talks with the United States will focus on infrastructure along the border to facilitate trade and movement of people, semiconductors and cybersecurity.
Mexico will use the so-called High-Level Economic Dialogue on Sept. 9 with the United States, which will restart after a four-year gap, to accelerate investment in Mexico, Ebrard said in a video shared on Twitter.
The talks will touch on “issues such as infrastructure at the border, what we have to do so that the difference between one side and the other is closed and we can facilitate trade and transit of people,” Ebrard said.
Mexico’s delegation, which also includes Economy Minister Tatiana Clouthier, would discuss investment in Central America with an aim to curb migration “so that people do not have to migrate for reasons of poverty and insecurity,” Ebrard said.
Electric mobility, cybersecurity, semiconductors and Mexico’s automotive industry would also be on the agenda, he said.
A semiconductor chip shortage has caused the region’s carmakers to cut previously expected output, a blow to Mexico’s massive auto sector, the country’s top foreign currency earner.
For the United States, the talks would be led by Vice President Kamala Harris, Ebrard said. U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken would also attend.
(Reporting by Anthony Esposito, Cassandra Garrison and Sharay Angulo; editing by Richard Pullin)
Source: One America News Network