In the Crosshairs of the US Trade War

Published in La Jornada
(Mexico) on 8 May 2019
by (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Tom Walker. Edited by Eric Stimson.
The United States has terminated the Suspension Agreement to the Antidumping Investigation on Mexican Tomato Exports. It will impose a tariff of 17.5% on Mexican tomatoes, which represent half of tomato consumption in the U.S. The agreement has been in force since 1996, but the International Trade Commission has decided to let it expire. The Commission has until November of this year to decide if it will make new arrangements or if it will definitively establish the tariff as a protectionist measure.

To put the issue in perspective: Tomatoes rank third among agricultural products exported to the United States from Mexico, so they play a significant role in binational commerce. On the Mexican side, they are a source of 400,000 direct and up to a million indirect jobs. It is an export crop in half of the Mexican states, in particular in Sinaloa and Baja California; for producers in those states, the tariff discussed would involve a cost of $350 million.

On the U.S. side, consumers could be facing price increases of up to 70% on the fruit, which in 2018 represented a $2 billion market.

On the other hand, the suspension of the tariff exemption is occurring in the context of the trade wars initiated by Donald Trump’s White House against several countries. To look no further, just this week the Trump administration reignited its confrontation with China, again threatening tariffs on Chinese exports. The tariffs would be imposed on a variety of the Asian nation’s products, with a value of $200 billion.

It is also clear that these aggressive measures are part of what Trump himself flaunts as his style of negotiation, which starts with a frontal attack to try to extract concessions from his counterpart. In this sense, the imposition of the tariff on tomatoes can be seen as part of the skirmishes prior to the ratification of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (the replacement for NAFTA). However, even if it finally ends up being nothing more than a short-term pressure tactic, the tariff will have serious effects for the Mexican economy and will affect the federal government’s plans for rural recovery.

Taking this perspective into account, it is necessary to keep two considerations in mind: First, that without ignoring the negotiations with the U.S. Department of Commerce, the Mexican authorities and producers should take this predicament as a reminder of the urgency of diversifying Mexico’s export markets. The goal should be to reduce our dependency on our biggest trading partner. However, in the case of tomatoes this will not be simple. The geographic proximity to the United States makes it an ideal export market for such a perishable product.

As a complement to this, the priorities of the policy for the support of rural areas should be reviewed and revised.

We should keep in mind that one of the principal objectives of the current Mexican government is to achieve food sovereignty. In this sense, it appears to be necessary to consider realigning support for the agriculture industry toward products for internal consumption. While this would result in less investment than would be generated by agribusiness oriented toward exports, it would make it possible to satisfy the nutritional needs of millions of Mexicans, especially in rural areas.


En la mira de la guerra comercial de EU

Al haberse vencido el Acuerdo de Suspensión a la Investigación Antidumping a las Exportaciones Mexicanas de Tomate, Estados Unidos impondrá al jitomate mexicano –y que representa la mitad del consumo en ese país– un arancel de 17.5 por ciento. El acuerdo se mantenía en vigor desde 1996, pero la Comisión de Comercio Internacional decidió dejarlo vencer y tiene hasta noviembre de este año para decidir si llega a un nuevo arreglo o establece de manera definitiva dicha medida proteccionista.

Para poner el asunto en perspectiva: el jitomate es el tercer producto agrícola más exportado de México a Estados Unidos, por lo que tiene un papel relevante en el comercio binacional. Del lado mexicano, supone una fuente de 400 mil empleos directos y hasta un millón de indirectos, y es un cultivo de exportación en la mitad de las entidades de la República, en particular Sinaloa y Baja California, para cuyos productores el arancel comentado supondría un costo de 350 millones de dólares.

En lo que toca al lado estadunidense, los consumidores podrían encarar un incremento de precios hasta de 70 por ciento en ese fruto que en 2018 representó un mercado de 2 mil millones de dólares.

Por otra parte, la supensión de la exención arancelaria ocurre en el contexto de las guerras comerciales puestas en marcha por la Casa Blanca de Donald Trump contra diversos países. Para no ir más lejos, esta misma semana el gobierno del magnate reactivó su confrontación con China al amagar de nueva cuenta con gravámenes por 200 mil millones de dólares sobre una variedad de productos de la nación asiática.

También está claro que estas medidas agresivas son parte de lo que el propio Trump presume como su estilo de negociación, en el cual se inicia con un ataque frontal para tratar de arrancar concesiones a su contraparte. En este sentido, la imposición del arancel al jitomate puede verse como parte de las escaramuzas previas a la ratificación del Tratado entre México, Estados Unidos y Canadá (sustituto del Tratado de Libre Comercio de América del Norte). Sin embargo, incluso si finalmente resultara ser nada más que una táctica de presión a corto plazo, el arancel tendrá efectos graves para la economía mexicana y afectará los planes de reactivación del campo proyectados por el gobierno federal.

Teniendo en cuenta esa perspectiva es necesario plantear dos consideraciones: primero, que sin dejar de lado las negociaciones con el Departamento de Comercio estadunidense, las autoridades y los productores mexicanos deben tomar el trance como un recordatorio de la urgencia de diversificar los mercados de exportación con el fin de reducir la dependencia a nuestro mayor socio comercial –aunque en el caso del jitomate esa diversificación no será una empresa fácil, por cuanto la inmediatez geográfica hacía de Estados Unidos el mercado ideal para las exportaciones de un producto tan perecedero.
Como complemento de lo anterior deberían revisarse las prioridades de la política de apoyos al campo.

Cabe recordar que uno de los objetivos centrales asumidos por la actual administración federal es el logro de la soberanía alimentaria, y en este sentido parece necesario analizar una reorientación de los apoyos al agro hacia productos de consumo interno que, si bien supondrían menores ingresos que los generados por la agroindustria orientada a la exportación, permitirían satisfacer las necesidades alimenticias de millones de mexicanos, sobre todo en zonas rurales.

This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

Poland: Ukraine Is Still Far from Peace. What Was Actually Decided at the White House?

Turkey: Pay Up or Step Aside: Tariffs in America’s ‘Protection Money’ Diplomacy

Ireland: Irish Examiner View: Would We Miss Donald Trump and Would a Successor Be Worse?

Austria: The EU Must Recognize That a Tariff Deal with Trump Is Hardly Worth Anything

Peru: Blockade ‘For Now’

Topics

Peru: Blockade ‘For Now’

Japan: US President and the Federal Reserve Board: Harmonious Dialogue To Support the Dollar

Austria: The EU Must Recognize That a Tariff Deal with Trump Is Hardly Worth Anything

Mexico: The Network of Intellectuals and Artists in Defense of Venezuela and President Nicholás Maduro

Hong Kong: Cordial Cross-Strait Relations Will Spare Taiwan Trump’s Demands, Says Paul Kuoboug Chang

Germany: The Tariffs Have Side Effects — For the US Too*

Ireland: We Must Stand Up to Trump on Climate. The Alternative Is Too Bleak To Contemplate

Canada: Carney Takes Us Backward with Americans on Trade

Related Articles

Austria: The EU Must Recognize That a Tariff Deal with Trump Is Hardly Worth Anything

Germany: The Tariffs Have Side Effects — For the US Too*

India: Will New US Envoy Help to Repair Ties under Threat?

Taiwan: Storm Commentary: The Impact on Taiwan of Trump’s New Global Trade Norms

Germany: Unfortunately, Reality Comes to Those Who Wait