Guacamole has been spared from tariffs for now. But salsa may not be so lucky.
While President Donald Trump put threatened tariffs on Mexican avocados on pause, the U.S. government plans to put a nearly 21% duty on fresh Mexican tomatoes starting July 14. A duty ā like a tariff ā is a tax on imports, and this one would impact the 4 billion pounds of tomatoes the U.S. imports from Mexico each year.
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Proponents say the import tax will help rebuild the shrinking U.S. tomato industry and ensure the produce eaten in the U.S. is also grown there. Mexico currently supplies around 70% of U.S. tomato market, up from 30% two decades ago, according to the Florida Tomato Exchange.
āUnless we even the playing field in terms of fair pricing, youāre not going to have a domestic industry for fresh tomatoes in the very near future,ā Robert Guenther, the trade group's executive vice president, said. Florida and California are the top U.S. producers of tomatoes, but most of Californiaās crop is turned into sauces and other products.
Opponents say the duty will make fresh tomatoes more expensive for U.S. buyers. NatureSweet, a San Antonio-based company that grows tomatoes in Mexico as well as the U.S., said it will be paying millions of dollars each month in duties if the decision isnāt reversed.
āWe will look for ways to adapt or streamline our operations, but the truth is, we are always doing that so we run an efficient business already,ā said Skip Hulett, NatureSweetās chief legal officer. āProduce is not a large-margin business. Weāre determining what portion of the cost we could absorb, but these added costs will most certainly need to be passed on to the consumer.ā
Tim Richards, a professor at the Morrison School of Agribusiness at Arizona State University, expects U.S. retail prices for tomatoes to rise by around 10.5% if the duty goes through.
Mexicoās government said last month it was convinced it could negotiate over the issue. But if the tomato tax takes effect, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has hinted her country may impose duties on chicken and pork legs imported from the U.S.
The tug-of-war over tomatoes has a long history. In 1996, shortly after the North American Free Trade Agreement went into effect, the U.S. Department of Commerce investigated allegations that Mexico was exporting tomatoes to the U.S. at artificially low prices, a practice known as dumping.
The U.S. government agreed to suspend the investigation if Mexico met certain rules, including selling its tomatoes at a minimum price. Since then, the agreement has been subject to periodic reviews, but the two sides always reached an agreement that avoided duties.
But last month, the Commerce Department announced its withdrawal from the latest agreement, saying it had been āflooded with commentsā from U.S. tomato growers who want better protection from Mexican imports.
Guenther, of the Florida Tomato Exchange, said even though Mexican exporters are required to charge a minimum price, shipments are only spot-checked, so exporters can get around that. But more generally, Mexico hurts the U.S. industry because it costs 40% to 50% less to grow tomatoes there, Guenther said. Land is cheaper, labor is cheaper and inputs like seeds and fertilizer cost less, he said.
Tomatoes are a labor-intensive crop, Guenther said, and the U.S. industry typically relies on immigrant workers through the H-2A visa program. That program required farmers to pay workers an average of $16.98 per hour last year, an amount that has jumped as labor has become harder to find. Richards estimates that workers on Mexican tomato farms earn about one-tenth that rate.
NatureSweet acknowledges that itās more cost-effective to grow tomatoes in Mexico, but says climate is one of the biggest reasons. The companyās Mexican greenhouses donāt need lighting, heating or cooling systems because of the year-round weather conditions.
āYou can relocate some industries, but you canāt relocate climate agriculture,ā Hulett said.
Lance Jungmeyer, the president of the Fresh Produce Association of the Americas, which represents importers of Mexican tomatoes, said Florida doesnāt produce the vine-ripened tomatoes that U.S. consumers increasingly favor. Florida tomatoes are picked when theyāre green and shipped to warehouses to ripen, he said.
āFlorida doesnāt grow the kinds of specialty tomatoes that have taken off, but they want to get protection,ā Jungmeyer said. āTheir market share is dropping for reasons of their own choice.ā
Guenther disagrees. āIf you put a Florida tomato up against a Mexican tomato, I think it would do very well in taste test,ā he said.
Adrian Burciaga, co-owner of Don Artemio, an upscale Mexican restaurant in Fort Worth, Texas, wouldnāt want to switch to a U.S. producer. He compares it to fine wine; if he wants a good cabernet sauvignon, he gets it from Napa, California. If he wants a good tomato that reminds him of his childhood, he gets it from Mexico.
āWe know the flavors they are going to bring to the salsas and moles. We donāt want to compromise flavors,ā Burciaga said.
Burciaga said his restaurant uses 300 to 400 pounds of Roma tomatoes from Mexico every week. He currently pays $19 for a 25-pound crate of tomatoes. He doesnāt relish paying the additional cost, but he feels he has no choice.
Burciaga said the tomato duty ā and the threat of Trump implementing the paused 25% tariff on many other products from Mexico ā are making it difficult to run his business.
āThe uncertainty part concerns us. A small or medium restaurant budgets things out. We know in advance that in six months things will increase, so weāre able to adjust,ā he said. āBut we donāt know these things in advance. How do you plan and how do you react?ā
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AP Reporter Maria Verza in Mexico City contributed.