Aiming at Trump strongholds, Mexico hits back with trade tariffs

Reuters  |  MEXICO CITY 

By David Garcia and Miguel Gutierrez

Mexico's response further raises trade tensions between the two countries and adds a new complication to efforts to renegotiate the trillion-dollar North American Free Trade Agreement between Canada, the and

American pork producers, for whom Mexico is the largest export market, were dismayed by the move.

Trump last week rattled some of the United States' closest allies by removing an exemption to tariffs on imported and aluminium that his administration had granted to Mexico, and the

Meanwhile, Trump revived the possibility on Tuesday that the will seek to replace NAFTA with bilateral deals with and Mexico, something both countries say they oppose.

Following of the new Mexican tariffs, which take effect immediately, the peso tumbled to its weakest level since February 2017, making it one of the worst performers among major currencies.

Mexico's retaliatory list, published in the government's official gazette, included a 20 percent tariff on U.S. pork legs and shoulders, apples and potatoes and 20 to 25 percent duties on types of cheeses and bourbon.

A net importer of U.S. steel, Mexico is also putting 25 percent duties on a range of American products.

Mexico's trade negotiators designed the list, in part, to include products exported by top Republican leaders' states, including Indiana, where Vice was formerly governor, according to a trade source familiar with the matter. Bourbon-producing is the home state of Mitch McConnell, a Republican.

The new tariffs could also have political implications in some hotly contested races as the Republicans seek to maintain control of both chambers in in November's election, illustrating the potential perils of Trump's aggressive efforts to set right what he sees as unfair trade balances with allies and rivals.

MIDWESTERN WORRIES

Iowa, where one incumbent Republican representative, Rod Blum, is seen as vulnerable, is an example of a place where could be hurt. The state is the top pork-producing state in the and Mexico is its main export market by volume.

"We need trade and one of the things we're concerned about is long-term implications that these trade issues will have on our partnerships with Mexico and and other markets," said Mike Naig, a Republican.

"If our customers around the world start going to other parts of the world for their supplies, that is a serious problem," he said.

hog futures at one point fell more than 2 percent following the Mexico pork tariff announcement.

"It certainly casts a negative pall over the market," said

The president of the U.S. National Pork Producers Council, Jim Heimerl, said Mexico accounted for nearly 25 percent of all pork shipments last year, adding that "a 20 percent tariff eliminates our ability to compete effectively in Mexico."

"This is devastating to my family and pork-producing families across the United States," said Heimerl, a from Johnstown,

In Minnesota, about 14 percent of the state's $7.1 billion of annual agricultural exports goes to Mexico, one of the state's top export markets, said Matthew Wohlman, Department of Agriculture

The Mexican tariffs will hit its pork, dairy and potato exports, state officials said.

U.S. Senator Mark Warner, a Democrat from Virginia, called the new tariffs a "gut punch" to farmers in his state, who he said exported more than $68 million in pork to Mexico last year.

"The President's trade war is going to cost jobs," he wrote in a tweet.

FIRST

Mexico announced its response to Trump's move last week but it did not provide details of tariff levels or a full list of products at the time.

The and Mexico do $600 billion in annual trade and about 16 percent of U.S. goods exports go to its southern neighbour. However, the Mexican economy relies more on trade than does the U.S. economy, with about 80 percent of its exports sold to

The trade fights with Mexico and Canada are part of the Trump administration's "First" economic agenda, which has also put on a collision course with over trade.

and have threatened tit-for-tat tariffs on goods worth up to $150 billion each, as Trump has pushed to open its economy further and address the United States' large trade deficit with

The United States imposed tariffs of 25 percent on imported steel and 10 percent on aluminium in March, citing national security grounds. Last week said it was ending a two-month exemption it had granted to imports from Canada, Mexico and the

The dispute with Mexico over tariffs makes it more difficult to conclude talks on renegotiating NAFTA between the three countries, discussions that began last year because Trump said the deal needed to be reworked to better serve the United States. Canada has also strongly objected to the metals tariffs.

The U.S. side has linked lifting its tariffs to a successful outcome of the NAFTA negotiations.

said Trump was still looking at the possibility of doing individual trade deals with Canada and Mexico in place of NAFTA.

"He's looking at the best way to make sure he gets the best deal possible for American workers and whether or not that's through NAFTA or other means, those options are on the table," Sanders told a briefing.

Separately, Mexico took steps on Tuesday to make it more attractive for other countries to send it pork by opening a tariff-free quota for some pork imports. said his country would now "surely" look to for pork products, used in many traditional dishes in Mexico.

(Reporting by Michael O'Boyle; additional reporting by PJ Huffstutter, Karl Plume and Thepolis Waters in Chicago and Dave Graham in Mexico City; writing by and Alistair Bell; editing by Frances Kerry)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, June 06 2018. 05:49 IST