More than 14 percent of $140 billion in annual U.S. farm exports have been or are likely to be hit by retaliatory tariffs in trade disputes with countries
such as China and Mexico, a top U.S. trade negotiator said Thursday.
Mexico imposed tariffs on American products including steel, pork and bourbon Tuesday, striking back against import duties on steel and aluminum imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump.
The duties raised trade tensions and further complicated efforts to renegotiate the trillion-dollar North American Free Trade Agreement between Canada, the United States and Mexico.
Trump blames the 1994 pact for U.S. manufacturing job losses to lower-cost Mexico.
Mexico is the largest export market for U.S. pork, the product likely being targeted for retaliatory tariffs more than any other commodity, said Gregg Doud, the chief agricultural negotiator for the office of the U.S. trade representative.
“We’ve got to get this NAFTA thing sorted out,” he told a room full hog farmers at an agricultural event in Iowa.
China has also imposed tariffs on U.S. pork and other products. It was the second-largest destination for U.S. pork by volume last year.
Trump has threatened tariffs on up to $150 billion worth of Chinese exports as part of a different dispute over Chinese intellectual property protections.
Separately, Trump has withdrawn from the multilateral Trans-Pacific Partnership promoted by Japan, the top destination for U.S. chilled and frozen beef. Europe is expected to become a bigger competitor to U.S. meat in Japan unless Washington strikes a new deal with Tokyo.
“I am very concerned about the situation with Japan,” Doud said.
A bright spot for U.S. pork is an agreement that allows U.S. pork exporters to ship meat to Argentina for the first time in 26 years, Doud said.
“These things now that we have to fix are very, very difficult,” he said. “This is going to get a little more difficult here in the short term.”
Ty Rosburg, who transports hogs for a living in Iowa and heard Doud speak, said he worried trade disputes could hurt the farmers who are his customers. Still, he said he believed U.S. officials were attempting to improve trade.
“I guess at some point you have to trust they’re working for the greater good and hope that we don’t get bit too bad,” he said.
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