"We're in a trade war. We've been in a trade war for decades. That's why we have the deficit," Ross told Bloomberg on Wednesday.
"We're
in a trade war. We've been in a trade war for decades. That's why we have the
deficit," he told Bloomberg in an interview on Wednesday.
He added
that his team is open minded about the North American Free Trade Agreement
discussions.
The Mexican
peso extended its early losses slightly after Ross' comments. It is down by
0.7% at 19.6444 per dollar as of 8:01 a.m. ET.
Last week,
Ross argued in an interview with CNBC that the peso would recover should the US
and Mexico manage to renegotiate and improve a trade deal.
"The
peso has fallen a lot mainly because of the fear of what will happen with
NAFTA. I believe that if we and the Mexicans make a very sensible trade
agreement, the Mexican peso will recover quite a lot," he told CNBC on
Friday.
"I
think partly the decline in the peso was due to worry about renegotiation of
NAFTA, but I think we also need to think about some other mechanisms for making
the peso/dollar exchange rate a bit more stable," he added.
His comments
last week appeared to have a more conciliatory tone, but it's worth noting that
a weaker peso relative to the dollar comes with negative side-effects for US
companies that have heavy exposure to Mexico.
"A more
stable (and stronger) peso is of course in the interests of the Trump
administration as the more the currency weakens, the cheaper Mexico's exports
become," Neil Shearing, chief emerging markets economist at Capital
Economics, wrote in commentary on Friday after the CNBC interview.
The peso saw
a tumultuous autumn and ended up being one of the big market casualties of the
2016 election. It crashed by about 20% after President Donald Trump won the
election.
However, it
has recovered since Trump's inauguration. In mid-February, it pushed to the
strongest level against the greenback since the day after Trump's election
after US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson met with Mexican officials.
Back during
his confirmation hearing, Ross said that NAFTA would be an early priority for
his department. He said he was "pro-trade," but only as long as it is
"sensible trade."
Source: Business
Insider
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