Gulf News

Trade war hits California farmers and Mexican cheese

US IS MEXICO’S LEADING FOREIGN SUPPLIER OF DAIRY GOODS INCLUDING $400M IN CHEESE

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Stephen Mancebo, a fourth-generation California dairy farmer with 2,300 cows, has battled ups and downs in his temperamen­tal industry for a quarter-century only to find himself a casualty of a US trade war with one of his biggest customers — Mexico.

Mancebo, 47, represents one of approximat­ely 1,300 dairy farm families eking out a living in California on the narrow margins of an enterprise that increasing­ly relies on exports.

For Mancebo and other US dairy farmers and processors who turn milk into cheese, butter and other products, the trade war is threatenin­g to snuff out a nascent rebound from three years of slumping prices that have driven nearly 140 California dairies out of business.

In retaliatio­n for tariffs that President Donald Trump imposed on imports of steel and aluminium, Mexico in late May announced duties on cheeses, other farm products and metals from the United States.

Milk and cheese prices on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, a key part of the formula that determines what dairy producers are paid, faltered immediatel­y on expectatio­ns Mexico’s tariffs would translate into US surpluses. The extent of export disruption has yet to be quantified.

But sudden downturns in demand are challengin­g for dairy farmers, whose means of production need to be fed and milked on a daily basis.

“Our product is perishable. I can’t sit on my milk for a month or two months,” Mancebo told Reuters outside his dairy in Tulare, in California’s Central Valley. “These cows can’t be shut off.”

After several years of showing little if any profit, Mancebo said he had been looking forward to a turnaround in prices that might have netted his operation $50,000 to $80,000 a month later this year, allowing him to break even for 2018.

“Most months I don’t make anything, so to take that, it’s a considerab­le loss at this time,” said Mancebo, whose support for Trump has been undiminish­ed despite the effect of the trade policies.

The United States is Mexico’s leading foreign supplier of dairy goods, including nearly $400 million (Dh1.5 billion) in cheese last year.

Top milk producer

Dairy operators in California, the nation’s top milk-producing state, are especially vulnerable to Mexico’s 25 per cent cheese tariffs.

California dairies, like Mancebo’s, export 30 per cent of all they produce, compared with 17 per cent for US dairies on average, and Mexico is their No 1 buyer.

California accounted for 35 per cent of US cheese exports to Mexico alone last year, estimated at 33,600 metric tons (74 million-plus pounds), said economist Annie AcMoody of the trade group Western United Dairymen.

But beyond immediate price swings, US dairy exporters worry about losing hard-earned market share to the European Union, which has just reached a freetrade accord with Mexico.

In a letter sent to the White House last month, 65 dairy producers, processors and cooperativ­es from around the country urged Trump to reach an accommodat­ion with Mexico.

The $12 billion aid package Trump announced last week to offset damage to farmers from the trade war could potentiall­y replace some short-term income losses, but it will do nothing to rebuild any market share seized by foreign competitor­s, said Bill Schiek, economist for the Dairy Institute of California.

Concerns also are growing that China could retaliate against US tariffs with a fresh set of duties on US dairy.

Our product is perishable. I can’t sit on my milk for a month or two months. These cows can’t be shut off. Most months I don’t make anything, so to take that, it’s a considerab­le loss at this time.” Stephen Mancebo | California dairy farmer

Mexico’s duty

Schiek said anecdotal evidence shows orders are being cancelled in anticipati­on of export demands softening as Mexico’s duties add to the cost of madein-America cheese, and buyers there turn elsewhere for supplies.

AcMoody said that even minor fluctuatio­ns can undercut American dairy producers because internatio­nal pricing is so competitiv­e.

Mancebo said that even as Trump’s policies are hurting him, he backs the measures: “Our trade deficit needed to be addressed. And it was going to be a struggle whenever it happened,” he said. “So it’s kind of like holding our breath. Problem is, we’re holding our breath underwater.”

 ?? Reuters ?? ■ Cows are feeding at Mancebo Holsteins in Tulare, California. Dairy operators in California, the nation’s top milk-producing state, are vulnerable to Mexico’s 25 per cent cheese tariffs.
Reuters ■ Cows are feeding at Mancebo Holsteins in Tulare, California. Dairy operators in California, the nation’s top milk-producing state, are vulnerable to Mexico’s 25 per cent cheese tariffs.

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