The Borneo Post

Mexico threatens to ditch US corn imports

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MEXICO CITY: Mexico has identified a potential weapon in its trade wrangle with US President Donald Trump: lucrative yellow cobs of American corn.

The Latin American nation imports billions of dollars’ worth of the yellow grain from the United States to feed its livestock.

But with Trump pushing to shake up the countries’ trade ties, Mexico is now threatenin­g to buy from elsewhere.

That is worrying corn growers in some of the very same US states that voted heavily in favour of Trump: Iowa, North Dakota, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska.

Trump has vowed to restrict free trade with Mexico in order to protect US jobs and industry.

But with Mexico gearing up for a potential trade battle, the effect could be the opposite – at least when it comes to corn.

“For US corn producers, Mexico is their number one export customer,” Thomas Sleight, president of the US Grains Council, told AFP.

“They are concerned about maintainin­g excellent relationsh­ips with long standing customers that they’ve built over generation­s.”

Mexico’ s Agricultur­e Secretary Jose Calzada said Mexico is in advanced talks with two other corn producers, Brazil and Argentina.

The US grain is cheaper than those countries’ corn at US$198 a ton, says Juan Carlos Anaya, head of the Agricultur­al Markets Consulting Group, a Mexican research firm.

Brazilian corn costs US$ 210 a ton and Argentine corn US$ 217, Anaya said.

Buying corn from other countries would drive up the price of certain products in Mexico, he warned.

But Mexico needs alternativ­e sources of corn to gain leverage in trade negotiatio­ns.

Trump has vowed to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with Mexico and Canada.

He wants new conditions that will help shift manufactur­ing jobs back to the United States and boost US production and exports.

Talks are expected to start this year.

“We do not know what the United States will propose,” said Calzada.

“We have to act first to be sure that when we arrive at that negotiatin­g table we are starting from a position of total strength.”

One leftist opposition senator, Armando Rios Piter, has launched a legislativ­e proposal to buy corn from Brazil and Argentina.

US “corn producers may have been fooled by Donald Trump when he said that Mexico was the only one benefiting from NAFTA,” Rios told AFP.

“Now that they see what is at stake, they will have to change their minds.”

Corn is Mexico’s fourthbigg­est import from the United States, after gasoline, diesel and natural gas.

Mexico imported US$ 2.32 billion worth of corn in 2016 – 10 per cent more than the previous year, according to Mexican government figures.

By comparison, it imported just US$17.7 million of corn from Argentina and US$10 million from Brazil.

Mexico is also a major importer of US dairy products, pork, rice, wheat and soya.

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