Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. tomato protocol holding up tariff deal, Mexicans complain

- ERIC MARTIN BLOOMBERG NEWS

A top Mexican official said Wednesday that a U.S. demand to inspect all imported tomatoes is preventing producers from the Latin American nation and its northern neighbor from reaching a deal to lift tariffs.

The two sides are close to an agreement, Mexico’s undersecre­tary of foreign relations, Jesus Seade, said on Twitter. But the U.S. demand to review 100% of the tomatoes received from Mexico, instead of a sample, would cause logistical collapse at customs checkpoint­s that would hurt the broader trade relationsh­ip, he said.

“If this condition is removed, we have a new agreement in the sector, for the benefit of consumers of this great product in both countries,” Seade wrote.

The negotiatio­n comes after U.S. President Donald Trump in June indefinite­ly postponed broader tariffs on Mexican goods in exchange for a pledge to do more to stop the influx of Central Americans to the United States. Talks also are taking place as the U.S. trade war with China escalates.

An email to the U.S. Department of Commerce press office seeking comment wasn’t immediatel­y returned.

In May, the U.S. began imposing preliminar­y duties of over 17% on Mexican tomatoes and also resumed an investigat­ion from the 1990s, which had been suspended for years, into whether tomatoes from Mexico were sold below the cost of production to make it hard for American

growers to compete. Florida growers in November had asked the U.S. government to renew the investigat­ion.

Mexican growers have tried to negotiate a new suspension agreement with the Commerce Department. They would need to reach a new accord by about Aug. 19 to allow for 30 days of public comment before the Commerce Department’s Sept. 19 deadline to complete its antidumpin­g investigat­ion.

After a Commerce Department determinat­ion in the dumping investigat­ion, the Internatio­nal Trade Commission would need to decide by early November whether the behavior, if it occurred, caused injury to American producers. If both conclusion­s are affirmativ­e, then tariffs would be imposed.

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