The Oklahoman

Tomato trade war eases

- Eric Martin and Jonathan Levin

The U.S. reached a deal to suspend tariffs on tomatoes from Mexico and implement import restrictio­ns demanded by Florida growers to protect their industry.

The agreement, which also ends a dumping probe by the Trump administra­tion, is expected to head off calamity for the Mexican tomato export industry, the world' s largest. It' s also likely to avert spikes in prices at U.S. supermarke­ts and restaurant­s.

The deal was reached around midnight on Tuesday in Washington, a group of Mexican agricultur­e industry associatio­ns said in a joint statement. It represente­d the final opportunit­y to end the dumping probe and allow for 30 days of public comment.

The pact pledges to lift a 17.6% provisiona­l tariff that went into effect in May, will allow Mexican producers to get back money that had already been deposited, sets reference prices on tomato imports, and includes a requiremen­t that organic tomatoes be priced 40% higher than varieties that aren't. The lack of an deal could have led to even higher duties of 25%.

Making the duties permanent threatened to hit the Mexican agricultur­e industry, which ships about $2 billion of tomatoes to the U.S. annually, one of its biggest fruit and vegetable exports along with avocados. Florida growers had said the nation was unfairly under cutting American farmers on price, a charge Mexico has denied.

Until this year, the tomato issue had been marked by an uneasy detente. Since 1996, the Commerce Department and Mexican producers have operated under a so-called suspension agreement, which put off any anti-dumping case in exchange for commitment­s by Mexican producers, including selling above a reference price.

While the agreement has been updated and renewed multiple times since then, President Donald Trump's administra­tion left the deal altogether in May, levying provisiona­l tariff sand relaunchin­g the dumping probe.

The new pa ct includes quality inspection­s of 92% of Mexican tomato trucks at the border, the nation's growers said. American growers had demanded that all tomatoes be reviewed, which Mexico argued was logistical­ly impossible.

"The draft agreement also closes loopholes from past suspension agreements that permitted sales below the reference prices," the U.S. Commerce Department said in a statement Wednesday.

The Commerce Department said the new inspection mechanism will head off imports of "poorcondit­ion" tomatoes that it said had "price suppressiv­e effects" for the broader market.

A study released earlier this year by Arizona State University economists — and commission­ed by a trade associatio­n representi­ng importers of Mexican tomatoes — showed how the prices of most varieties of tomatoes would spike if Mexican imports fell by half.

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