Wilbur Ross seen imposing
Mexico sugar deal over industry objections
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[June 10, 2017]
By David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Commerce
Secretary Wilbur Ross is likely to impose a new sugar trade deal with
Mexico even if final revisions to it fail to win support from the U.S.
industry, trade lawyers and experts say.
After announcing a deal this week that would dramatically cut the amount
of refined sugar that Mexico ships to the United States, officials from
the two countries are working with their industries on final language
that would govern its operation.
At issue is a new right of first refusal granted to Mexico to supply all
U.S. sugar needs not met by domestic suppliers or other foreign quota
holders.
A coalition of American sugar cane and beet farmers and a major refiner
want a more explicit guarantee that the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
not Mexican producers, will dictate what type of sugar fills that gap.
They are worried that a flood of refined sugar will pour in, rather than
the raw sugar needed to keep U.S. mills running.
The final sticking point stands in the way of resolving a years-long
dispute over Mexican access to the highly regulated U.S. sugar market,
which is protected by a complex web of subsidies and rationed quotas for
foreign producers.
The sugar industry is known for its sway in Washington. But its point of
view on Mexican imports is not shared by sugar users such as
confectioners and soda makers.
The Trump administration wants to clear away the sugar dispute and a
lumber trade row with Canada before starting full-scale negotiations to
revise the North American Free Trade Agreement.
An industry rarely objects to a government-negotiated settlement of its
anti-dumping case, and U.S. sugar producers could do little to stop the
Commerce Department from implementing a final deal after a two-week
comment period, said Seattle-based trade lawyer William Perry, who
previously worked at Commerce and the U.S. International Trade
Commission.
While the industry could ask the International Trade Commission to
overturn the settlement that suspends anti-dumping and anti-subsidy duty
orders issued in 2014, chances for success look slim. The panel in 2015
rejected a challenge by two sugar refiners to the previous U.S.-Mexico
pact.
"Petitioners are never entirely happy with suspension agreements like
this," Perry said. "They would rather have anti-dumping and
countervailing duty orders with rates high enough to shut out imports."
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U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross testifies before a House
Appropriations Subcommittee about the newly released 2018 budget on
Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 25, 2017. REUTERS/Aaron
P. Bernstein
A Commerce spokesman said that Ross hoped the U.S. sugar industry would
ultimately endorse the final agreement.
Gary Hufbauer, a trade expert at the Peterson Institute for International
Economics, said the administration was probably willing to compromise on some
industry-specific concerns to help reach its larger NAFTA goals of reducing U.S.
trade deficits.
The U.S. sugar industry must probably present evidence of new Mexican dumping
before going back to Commerce for more changes to the deal, said Daniel Pearson,
a senior fellow of the libertarian Cato Institute and former International Trade
Commission chairman.
"They would do well to take this agreement and run with it and see how it
works," Pearson said, noting that it raises prices and keeps U.S. refiners
well-supplied with raw sugar.
Mexico made major concessions to maintain its access to the lucrative U.S.
market, agreeing to ship no less than 70 percent of its quota volume as raw
sugar to U.S. refineries. It gave ground on nearly all of the U.S. producers'
demands.
American Sugar Alliance spokesman Phillip Hayes said the final hurdle should be
easy to address by making clear that the USDA, not Mexico, can dictate the type
and purity level of any additional imports.
But Juan Cortina, head of Mexico's main sugar trade group, said there was no
problem with the language because any additional needs would filled with raw
sugar, as Mexican producers would have to keep higher inventories of that grade.
(Additional reporting by Adriana Barrera in Mexico City and Chris Prentice in
New York; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
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