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Recent Mexican tomatoes singled out for 17% tariff
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Recent Mexican tomatoes singled out for 17% tariff

Scoopico
Last updated: July 15, 2025 4:04 am
Scoopico
Published: July 15, 2025
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The U.S. authorities stated Monday it’s instantly inserting a 17% responsibility on most recent Mexican tomatoes after negotiations ended with out an settlement to avert the tariff.

Proponents stated the import tax will assist rebuild the shrinking U.S. tomato business and be sure that produce eaten within the U.S. can also be grown there. Mexico at the moment provides round 70% of the U.S. tomato market, up from 30% twenty years in the past, in response to the Florida Tomato Change.

Robert Guenther, the commerce group’s govt vp, stated the responsibility was “an unlimited victory for American tomato farmers and American agriculture.”

However opponents stated the import tax will make tomatoes costlier for U.S. customers. Mexican greenhouses concentrate on vine-ripened tomatoes, whereas Florida tomatoes are usually grown in fields and picked inexperienced.

“As an business, we’re saddened that American customers must pay a tomato tax, or responsibility, for a lowered number of the tomatoes they like, akin to tomatoes on the vine, grape tomatoes, Romas, cocktail tomatoes and different specialty varieties,” stated Lance Jungmeyer, president of the Recent Produce Affiliation of the Americas, which represents importers of Mexican tomatoes.

Tim Richards, a professor on the Morrison Faculty of Agribusiness at Arizona State College, stated U.S. retail costs for tomatoes will probably rise round 8.5% with a 17% responsibility.

Jacob Jensen, a commerce coverage analyst on the American Motion Discussion board, a right-leaning coverage institute, stated areas with the next reliance on Mexican tomatoes might see worth will increase near 10%, since will probably be tougher to interchange that offer, whereas different elements of the U.S. might see worth will increase nearer to six%.

The responsibility stems from a longstanding U.S. grievance about Mexico’s tomato exports and is separate from the 30% base tariff on merchandise made in Mexico and the European Union that President Donald Trump introduced on Saturday.

The Commerce Division stated in late April that it was withdrawing from a deal it first reached with Mexico in 2019 to settle allegations the nation was exporting tomatoes to the U.S. at artificially low costs, a apply often known as dumping.

As a part of the deal, Mexico needed to promote its tomatoes at a minimal worth and abide by different guidelines. Since then, the settlement has been topic to periodic opinions, however the two sides at all times reached an settlement that prevented duties.

In saying its withdrawal from the Tomato Suspension Settlement, the Commerce Division stated it had been “flooded with feedback” from U.S. tomato growers who needed higher safety from Mexican items.

“Mexico stays certainly one of our biggest allies, however for much too lengthy our farmers have been crushed by unfair commerce practices that undercut pricing on produce like tomatoes. That ends in the present day,” Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick stated in an announcement. “This rule change is in step with President Trump’s commerce insurance policies and method with Mexico.”

However others, together with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Nationwide Restaurant Affiliation, had known as on the Commerce Division to achieve an settlement with Mexico. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, and Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, had additionally urged the Commerce Division to go away the present tomato settlement in place.

In a letter despatched to Lutnick final week, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and 30 different enterprise teams stated U.S. firms make use of 50,000 staff and generate $8.3 billion in financial advantages transferring tomatoes from Mexico into communities throughout the nation.

“We’re involved that withdrawing from the settlement – at a time when the enterprise neighborhood is already navigating vital commerce uncertainty – might result in retaliatory actions by our buying and selling companions towards different commodities and crops that might create additional hardship for U.S. companies and customers,” the letter stated.

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