Mexico slaps 50% tariff on corn imports amid trade row with U.S., Canada
MEXICO CITY — Mexico on Saturday began imposing a 50-percent tariff on white corn imports, a move the president says looks to boost national production and prevent imports of genetically modified corn.
The measure, published late Friday in the Mexican government’s official gazette, will be in force until the end of the year and occurs amid a trade dispute between Mexico and its North American trade partners, Canada and the United States, over genetically modified corn.
White corn was among the basic foods that were exempted from tariffs earlier this year in an attempt by the Mexican government to control inflation. But according to the decree, the decision “has not generated a significant impact on the decrease in prices in the national market, so it’s considered appropriate to eliminate it.”
At 5.84 percent in May, the Mexican government considers inflation more or less under control.
Mexico imports some white corn — the kind used for human consumption — mainly from the United States and South Africa. But since the tariff goes against the U.S.-Mexico-Canada free trade agreement, it could complicate the trade dispute that the country already has with the U.S. and Canada over GM corn.
Article continues after this advertisementMexico wants to restrict GM white corn for human consumption and eventually also veto GM yellow corn for animal feed. The U.S. and Canada say that would harm trade in the region. Mexico has been importing GM feed corn from the U.S. for years, buying about $3 billion worth annually.
Article continues after this advertisementBoth the United States and Canada have said that Mexico’s fear of the dangers of genetically modified corn is “not grounded in science.”
Earlier this month, Canada said it would join a trade dispute panel that the United States requested over Mexico’s proposed limits on imports of genetically modified corn. The U.S. government asked that the dispute process be formally opened June 2, after talks with the Mexican government failed to yield results.
A panel of experts would have about six months to study the complaint and release its findings. Trade sanctions could follow if Mexico was found to have violated the U.S.-Mexico Canada free trade agreement.
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said he was not afraid of controversy and has insisted that only domestic white corn should be used for human consumption.