Central America | CAFTA Is Good News Fo...
Central America
CAFTA Is Good News For U.S. Beef And Pork Industries
The U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) announced today that a Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) had been successfully completed with Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala. The agreement is good news for the red meat industry.
U.S. Prime and Choice beef cuts will immediately be exempt from both tariffs and quotas. Exports of all other beef products to Nicaragua, Honduras and El Salvador will see tariffs reduced to zero over the next 15 years, while Guatemalan tariffs will be phased out over the next 10 years. U.S. beef exports to all four Central American countries will not be bound to quotas.
The new free trade zone will establish import quotas for U.S. pork products going to Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, but will phase out the tariffs on these products and the quotas themselves over the next 15 years. Each country will have a separate quota for pork imports:
Guatemala 3,950 metric tons (mt), increasing 5 percent per year
Honduras 2,000 mt, increasing 7.5 percent per year
El Salvador 1,500 mt, increasing 10 percent per year
Nicaragua 1,000 mt, increasing 10 percent per year
A news release with more details and reactions from USMEF President & CEO Philip Seng and Vice President, Western Hemisphere Homero Recio is available online.
Central America
CAFTA Is Good News For U.S. Beef And Pork Industries
The U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) announced today that a Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) had been successfully completed with Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala. The agreement is good news for the red meat industry.
U.S. Prime and Choice beef cuts will immediately be exempt from both tariffs and quotas. Exports of all other beef products to Nicaragua, Honduras and El Salvador will see tariffs reduced to zero over the next 15 years, while Guatemalan tariffs will be phased out over the next 10 years. U.S. beef exports to all four Central American countries will not be bound to quotas.
The new free trade zone will establish import quotas for U.S. pork products going to Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, but will phase out the tariffs on these products and the quotas themselves over the next 15 years. Each country will have a separate quota for pork imports:
Guatemala 3,950 metric tons (mt), increasing 5 percent per year
Honduras 2,000 mt, increasing 7.5 percent per year
El Salvador 1,500 mt, increasing 10 percent per year
Nicaragua 1,000 mt, increasing 10 percent per year
A news release with more details and reactions from USMEF President & CEO Philip Seng and Vice President, Western Hemisphere Homero Recio is available online.