U.S. farmers have much to lose if NAFTA deal collapses
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[January 29, 2018]
By P.J. Huffstutter and David Ljunggren
CHICAGO/MONTREAL (Reuters) - A collapse of
the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which U.S. President
Donald Trump has threatened to scrap, could create the most profound
disruption for U.S. farmers who produce grains, meats and dairy products
sold to Canada and Mexico.
Blake Erwin, a third-generation American who raises cattle, corn and
soybeans in Dixon, Nebraska, said on Saturday that he is not closely
monitoring the negotiations, but that he hopes the outcome will support
U.S. farmers who are struggling to make a living due to low commodities
prices, rising healthcare costs and high property taxes.
"A trade agreement has to be fair for the United States, but we also
want to keep those exports going for the farmer," said Erwin, 34. "We
don't want to mess up any good things we got going."
Erwin spoke to Reuters over the weekend as U.S., Canadian and Mexican
negotiators met in Montreal for the sixth of seven planned rounds of
talks to revamp the 1994 pact.
U.S. farmers and exporters are fighting to preserve their exports at a
time when Canada is finding customers in new markets. They also face
strained relations between the United States and Mexico, a major buyer
of U.S. corn, wheat, beef, pork and dairy products.
"The U.S. is behaving so badly it's going to create opportunities for
Canadian agriculture," Iowa State University economist Dermot Hayes said
last week during a visit to Winnipeg.
Trade flows have already begun to shift.
The United States remains the dominant grain supplier to Mexico. Yet
Mexico imported 583,000 metric tonnes of corn from Brazil in 2017, a 980
percent jump from the previous year, according to Mexican government
trade data.
Mexican imports of U.S. soybean meal, used to feed chickens and
livestock, fell 29 percent in the first 11 months of 2017, compared with
the same period the previous year, according to the U.S. Department of
Agriculture.
'MORE IMPORTANT THAN PRICE'
Trump's animosity toward Mexico and complaints over trade imbalances
have pushed longtime buyers to work with new suppliers and expand
existing relationships in South America, the European Union and other
regions, trade experts said.
"You get partners who build a bond and get real comfortable working
together. We're starting to see that bond becoming more important than
price for where countries are buying grains," said Karl Setzer, risk
management team leader for MaxYield Cooperative.
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A corn cob rests on the ground after a harvest near Dixon, Nebraska,
U.S., October 26, 2017. Picture taken October 26, 2017.
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
Case in point: A rare 30,000-tonne shipment of Brazilian corn steamed
its way in November to grain terminals in the state of Veracruz, Mexico,
operated by agribusiness heavyweights Cargill Inc [CARG.UL] and Archer
Daniels Midland Co <ADM.N>.
Despite a steep decline in U.S. corn prices, with stocks sitting at a
historic high, the buyer paid a premium for the Brazilian grain - as
much as $2 more per tonne, according to trade sources.
A Cargill spokeswoman said the company had no immediate comment. ADM did
not respond to requests for comment.
Canada last week agreed to join the new version of the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, part of a broad effort to court new trade partners.
"The tough NAFTA negotiations have convinced Canada that we have to have
a number of trading partners, not just one," said Ron Bonnett, a beef
farmer and president of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture.
The revised TPP, known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement
for Trans-Pacific Partnership, will reduce tariffs on Canadian pork,
beef and wheat to Japan and other markets, in some cases eliminating
duties altogether.
Darci Vetter, former U.S. chief agriculture negotiator, said if the
talks dragged on past March they might not end until next year, making
it more challenging to sell American farm products.
"Other trade agreements will be implemented, buyers of U.S. products in
Mexico and Canada won't be sure that we are a good long-term bet, and so
we're likely to see our clients react accordingly," she told a panel on
NAFTA in Montreal on Friday.
(Reporting by P.J. Huffstutter in Chicago and David Ljunggren in
Montreal; Writing and additional reporting by Rod Nickel in Winnipeg,
Manitoba; Additional reporting by Lucas Jackson in Dixon, Nebraska;
Editing by Jim Finkle and Daniel Wallis)
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