Americans to pay more for sugar

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Published Jun 11, 2017

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Washington - A new deal between the US and Mexico on sugar exports may

have averted a costly trade war. But it's also sparked a fierce battle between

the Trump administration and some of America's largest food companies, who

claim Tuesday's agreement will harm their businesses and ratchet up food costs

for consumers.

Under the preliminary agreement, Mexico will accept a new

minimum price for the sugar it sells to the US and restrict the amount of

refined sugar it exports, measures that will maintain high sugar prices for

domestic producers.

But while those concessions were immediately celebrated as a

victory for the US and for US sugarcane and sugar beet farmers, in particular -

it's been panned by representatives of the processed food, confectionery and

soda industries, who have long fought federal protections of domestic sugar.

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The dispute pits some of America's largest food companies

against one of its most powerful agricultural lobbies and against the Trump

administration itself. In doing so, it also exposes a central paradox in

President Trump's aggressive, "America first" trade approach: Any

policy that benefits some US firms will also, inevitably, hurt others.”

"Today's announcement is a bad deal for hardworking

Americans and exemplifies the worst form of crony capitalism," said the

Coalition for Sugar Reform which represents Coca-Cola, Nestle, Kraft Heinz and

hundreds of other food companies in an incendiary statement. "US sugar

policy should empower America's food and beverage companies to create more

jobs, not put hundreds of thousands of good-paying U.S. jobs at risk just to

benefit one small interest group."

From the food industry's perspective, this agreement and the

controversial US sugar-support policy that it represents  artificially inflates US sugar prices to

points far above the world market. According to the Department of Agriculture's

Economic Research Service, which measures price according to futures contracts,

the world price for both raw and refined sugar is lower than the respective US

raw and refined sugar prices.

That is no accident, economists say: Since 1981, the U.S.

government has guaranteed a minimum price for US sugar through a system of

quotas, buy-backs and price-support loans. Restrictions on imports are key to

the program, as any increase in cheap foreign sugar could cause prices to drop

below the guaranteed minimum for US producers.

Facing such a situation in 2013 and 2014, the US and Mexico

agreed to a deal that set minimum prices for Mexican sugar and limited the

amounts of both raw and refined sugar it could sell into the US. Tuesday's

agreement is an extension of that deal, and will increase both the import

limits and the minimum prices. That will have the practical effect of

maintaining sugar prices for US farmers and refiners said Phillip Hayes, a

spokesman for the American Sugar Alliance.

He characterizes the agreement as a "law enforcement

issue" that was needed to protect US producers from Mexican dumping. "Hawaii's

sugar industry shut down last December because of the uncertain market,"

Hayes said. "That was largely driven by Mexico's predatory trade

practices."

But higher sugar prices also come with costs not to farmers,

but to companies that use sugar in their products. Higher ingredient costs cut

into manufacturers' margins, which has prompted several to relocate outside of

the US.

The makers of Life Savers, Dums Dums and Jelly Belly beans

have all opened factories overseas, citing the high cost of American sugar. It

was implicated in the closure of a Chicago Nabisco plant last summer, which

resulted in the layoff of 600 people.

"From a jobs perspective, there are 600 000 people

working in the sugar-using industry," said Rick Tasco, the president of

the Sweetener Users Association, which represents manufacturers. "The

sugar-processing sector only employs 18 000 people."

Consumers also appear to purchase fewer sugar-sweetened

goods when sugar prices are up. A 2011 report by the US. International Trade

Commission found that liberalizing America's sugar trade policies would give

the economy a $49 million boost, largely in the form of increased food sales.

That same year, the American Enterprise Institute, a

conservative think tank, calculated the consumer cost of higher sugar prices at

almost $3 billion a year.

"That's a cost of between $10 and $11 for every man,

woman and child in the US," said Robert Kudrle, a professor of

international trade policy at the University of Minnesota.

"It's why US sugar policy is used in textbooks to

illustrate the political economy of protectionism. A very small group of people

have managed to get public policy to favour them - basically by taxing the rest

of the population."

The sugar industry vehemently disputes these claims, and

disagrees that trade restrictions like those announced Tuesday have any impact

on consumer prices. It points out that food companies rarely pass on savings to

consumers: Candy bars did not suddenly get cheaper in 2013, for instance, when

US sugar prices plummeted.

But the Sugar Reform Coalition has promised to press its

case on the issue even if the preliminary deal with Mexico is approved. The

organization has the support of a number of prominent food industry trade

associations, as well as a bipartisan group of lawmakers who in May asked

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross to liberalize US policy on Mexican sugar.

A number of food companies, including Coca-Cola, Cargill,

and corn syrup maker Archer Daniels Midland, also met with the White House's

agricultural advisor, Ray Starling, to lobby against the sugar industry in May,

according to Reuters.

But while those campaigns appear to have failed, the food

industry will have another chance to address sugar trade soon. The issue has

historically drawn extra attention around the Farm Bill, which is due for a

2018 renewal.

The Sugar Reform Coalition is already asking lawmakers to

push for reforms in those negotiations.Tuesday's agreement "[solidifies]

that it's time for Congress to shoulder the responsibility of fixing this

broken program," the group said in a statement.

WASHINGTON POST 

 

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