et. al.. “Will the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement Reshape the Global Trade and Investment System? Regional and Systemic Implications: Issues and Options”. Global Agenda Council on Trade & FDI. Fried, Jonathan T. and Peter Drape
What’s In and What’s New: Issues and Options
TPP, the NAFTA Countries, and the Integration of the Americas
Wilson Center México Insitute
SAI Law & Economics (in Spanish)
Video remembrance of the founding of our firm, its work, value and growth throughout its 20 years of existence in the words of renowned colleagues.
“The TPP and international trade” HSBC (in Spanish)
12 countries in the Asia-Pacific region concluded negotiations on the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement.
“Exim Bank: deciding its future” HSBC (in Spanish)
After four months of uncertainty regarding the future of the Export-Import Bank of the United States (“Exim Bank”), on October 27, 2015, the House of Representatives approved its renewal to continue operating; the respective authorization from the Senate is still pending.
NAFTA and energy reform in Mexico HSBC (in Spanish)
Under the energy reform, an area of 178,554 km² will be auctioned from 2015 to 2019, including 244 fields for extraction and 670 areas for exploration.
SMEs in International Trade: The View from Developing Countries.. What Companies want the World Trading System. Editado por Beatriz Leycegui y otros miembros del Global Agenda Council on Trade & Foreign Direct Investment, p. 8-10
What Companies
Want from the World
Trading System
Exchange rate in Mexico in the context of the North American region HSBC (in Spanish)
Since the mid-1990s, the three North American economies have been part of a remarkable process of macroeconomic convergence. This convergence, which arises as a consequence of the economic integration of Mexico, the United States, and Canada with the entry into force of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), has been observed in the most important macroeconomic variables.
Commission strives to close regulatory gap concerning competitor collaborations
The Federal Economic Competition Commission recently released its Strategic Work Plan 2015. Among other things, the plan addresses one of the main issues facing antitrust regulation in Mexico: collaborations among competitors. The plan specifically commits to drafting, submitting to public consultation and ultimately issuing guidelines setting out the commission’s criteria for assessing collaborations among competitors.
The Free Trade Agreement and the formation of a region (in Spanish)
Economic Culture Fund