More Than Guac: Mexico Tariffs Will Hit Consumers, Business

Avocados from Mexico for sale at the Golden Hog Market in Key Biscayne, June 2, 2019. President Donald Trump plans to impose tariffs on imports from Mexico (Key News/Tony Winton)

WASHINGTON  — President Donald Trump’s surprise threat to impose escalating tariffs on Mexican imports jolted industry leaders throughout the U.S. economy Friday, sparked opposition even from usual Trump allies and set the stage for American consumers to face higher prices.

[In Key Biscayne, one local merchant said the tariffs could cause price increases at the grocery store. “So far we have seen severe increases and supply shortages in produce such as avocados and tomatoes. Nationwide inventories were high few weeks ago, so the price increase is just starting to impact the final consumer. We are expecting severe increases in the next days/week,” said Jorge Gonzalez, owner of The Golden Hog.]

It also sent stock markets tumbling, with the Dow Jones industrial average closing down roughly 355 points, or 1.4 percent. Investors poured money instead into the safety of bonds, sending yields lower and signaling that they fear the economy will slow in the coming months.

Trump vowed Thursday to slap a 5 percent tariff on all Mexican imports on June 10, just over a week away, and raise those tariffs to 25 percent by October, unless Mexico stops the flow of Central American migrants into the United States.

If the tariffs were to take effect, they could eventually raise prices for a new Chevrolet Blazer SUV, a burrito at Chipotle, a new shirt or a Corona beer. A 5 percent duty on the $346.5 billion of goods imported from Mexico translates into $17 billion in tariffs. Some of that higher cost might be paid, at least initially, by U.S. companies. But a significant portion would likely be passed on to U.S. shoppers.

The impact of Trump’s latest tariffs, should they be imposed, will fall first on U.S. companies. Businesses in many industries have set up tightly linked supply chains with Mexico. Billions of dollars of auto parts, for example, are sent back and forth across the U.S.-Mexico border, in some cases several times, as components are added and integrated into finished cars. Similar networks exist in other industries, from clothing to electronics. The import taxes could quickly translate into much higher costs.

“That’s what’s so concerning about these tariffs,” said John Mitchell, president of IPC, a trade group representing the electronics industry. “It undercuts the region’s ability to leverage each other’s strengths to benefit North American manufacturing.”

Peter Navarro, a top trade adviser to the Trump White House, insisted in an interview on CNBC that the Mexican government and businesses would pay the tariffs. But about 40 percent of imports from Mexico are from U.S.-affiliated companies, meaning there is no Mexican company that would pay. Instead the tariffs will simply raise costs for U.S. companies — and ultimately for consumers — particularly for parts that cross the border several times, Mitchell said.

The U.S. economy has been integrating with Mexico’s since the implementation of NAFTA in 1994. All U.S.-made cars now include at least some parts from overseas, and 37 percent of those parts are from Mexico.

“Any barrier to the flow of commerce across the U.S.-Mexico border will have a cascading effect — harming U.S. consumers, threatening American jobs and investment, curtailing the economic progress that the administration is working to reignite,” said David Schwietert, interim president of the Auto Alliance trade group, which represents U.S. automakers and foreign companies that build cars in the United States, such as BMW and Toyota.

Shares of General Motors Co., which imports more vehicles into the United States than any other automaker, tumbled 4.25 percent Friday.

“For GM, we roughly estimate that a 5 percent tariff could be a several-hundred-million dollar annual earnings hit,” said Itay Michaeli of Citi Investment Research.

The new tariffs came as a surprise for many companies because the Trump administration had just renewed its push to win congressional approval for the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement, its update to NAFTA.

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, a usual Trump ally and the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, condemned the president’s action as “a misuse of presidential tariff authority” that would burden American consumers and “seriously jeopardize passage of USMCA.”

Some industry representatives said the duties would not encourage companies to return production to the United States., as Trump has said he wants, but actually have the opposite effect: It will discourage them from relocating to the United States because they’d have to pay more for imported parts.

“If you can’t buy your components here, you’re not going to think about coming back here,” Mitchell said.

Americans may also see higher prices in grocery stores. The United States imports $12 billion of fresh fruits and vegetables from Mexico, including tomatoes, avocados, peppers and lemons.

“This is a tax on healthy diets, plain and simple,” said Lance Jungmeyer, president of the Fresh Produce Association of the Americas.

Jungmeyer noted food imports from Mexico haven’t been subject to tariffs for decades, and importers would have to file paperwork with Customs to pay duties. That can 10 days or more to process, potentially leaving many companies unable to import for a time after June 10.

“I’ve got to educate a whole range of people who haven’t paid tariffs on Mexican produce since 1995,” Jungmeyer said.

Many U.S. restaurant chains buy tomatoes and other fresh produce from Mexico. Laurie Schalow, an executive for Chipotle Mexican Grill, said the chain has sought to diversify its supplier base and now buys some avocados from Chile and Peru and is less dependent on Mexico. Still, the tariffs would hurt the company, Schalow said.

Trump has already imposed 25 percent tariffs on $250 billion of goods from China. The additional duties on Mexican imports could weaken the U.S. economy. Growth was already forecast to slip to a roughly 1.5 percent annual pace in the April-June quarter, down from 3.1 percent in the first three months of the year.

Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, estimates that if the full 25 percent duties on Mexican goods were put in place, U.S. growth next year would be cut by 0.7 percentage point.

The U.S. imports $2.4 billion of clothing and textiles from Mexico. Stephen Lamar, executive vice president of American Apparel and Footwear Association, said companies are already thinking about how to cut costs but will likely have to raise prices because their profit margins are so thin.

Mexico is the eighth-largest supplier of clothing and seventh-largest supplier of footwear to the U.S. market. It’s the largest supplier of men’s and boy’s jeans, accounting for 35 percent of imports, according to the AAFA.

Shares of Kontoor Brands, which includes Wrangler and Lee, fell nearly 8 percent, while shares of Levi Strauss dropped 7 percent. Both companies obtain some of their denim from Mexico.

About 70 percent of imported beer is from Mexico, up from less than 20 percent in 1990, according to the National Beer Wholesalers Association. Shares of Constellation Brands, which makes Corona and Modelo beers, among others, fell nearly 6 percent Friday.

Jeremy Seaver, owner of Tios Mexican Cafe in Ann Arbor, Michigan, said the tariffs would hurt his business. He uses avocados from Mexico, serves Mexican tequila, beer and soda and sells Mexican hot sauces. Even his restaurant’s decorations are all from Mexico, he said.

“I’m very concerned,” he said. “Five percent (tariff) doesn’t sound like a lot, but to a small business like mine, that’s a lot.”

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D’Innocenzio reported from New York. AP Writers Michelle Chapman in New York and Dee-Ann Durbin in Detroit also contributed to this report. Key News Tony Winton contributed to this report