USApple calls for end of tariffs it says, 'harm U.S. agriculture'

Prior to the retaliatory tariffs, India had been a promising growth market for U.S. apples, according to USApple.
Prior to the retaliatory tariffs, India had been a promising growth market for U.S. apples, according to USApple.
(Image courtesy of USApple)

The U.S. Apple Association has joined more than 40 agriculture and food groups to call for the elimination or reduction of U.S. tariffs being imposed on other countries, which it says are sparking retaliatory tariffs that harm U.S. agriculture.

In a letter sent to U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai, the groups said America’s agriculture communities are already suffering with higher fuel, machinery and input costs due to the pandemic; supply chain disruptions; inflation and the war on Ukraine. These challenges are compounded by decreased market access, the groups said.

The U.S. apple industry has been hit particularly hard with the loss of exports, which had accounted for about $1 billion worth of apples annually, roughly one-third of the country’s crop, said the Falls Church, Va.-based USApple in a release.

In general, the U.S. apple industry has seen a 19% loss of exports since 2018. The biggest of those losses is India, where exports have decreased by 86%. China follows with an 18% loss of exports, according to the association.

“The retaliatory tariffs in response to the U.S.’s tariffs have crushed apple growers’ export sales,” USApple President and CEO Jim Bair said. “India had risen sharply in its imports of our apples to take over the No. 2 spot of our export buyers. The China market had just fully opened to our apples in 2015 and had quickly risen to No. 6 as an export destination. These two alone have cost growers hundreds of millions of dollars in lost sales, sales that are gone forever. We can only hope the administration takes quick action to help growers capture future sales.”

Prior to the retaliatory tariffs, India had been a promising growth market for U.S. apples, according to USApple. Exports to India the first nine months of 2017 more than doubled sales in 2016. 

Retaliatory tariffs by China are also a “significant concern,” said USApple, pointing to the relatively new relationship between the U.S. apple industry and the most populated country in the world. 

“The apple industry continues to grapple with the consequences of a trade war in which we were innocent bystanders,” Bair said. “Compound the past four years of lost market access with skyrocketing input and labor costs, all while apple prices are relatively stable unlike the daily stories of food price inflation, and it has suddenly become a perfect storm for apple growers.

“That’s why we are calling on the administration to put an end to the tariffs that are hurting U.S. growers and apple businesses,” Bair added.  

 

 

 

 

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