(Washington, D.C.,
December 10, 2019) – U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue issued
the following statement after United States Trade Representative Robert
Lighthizer and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi announced agreement on the
U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA):
“USMCA is a big win for
American workers and the economy, especially for our farmers and ranchers.
The agreement improves virtually every component of the old NAFTA, and the
agriculture industry stands to gain significantly,” said Secretary Perdue.
“President Trump and Ambassador Lighthizer are laying the foundation for a
stronger farm economy through USMCA and I thank them for all their hard
work and perseverance to get the agreement across the finish line. While I
am very encouraged by today’s breakthrough, we must not lose sight – the
House and Senate need to work diligently to pass USMCA by Christmas.”
Background:
USMCA will advance United
States agricultural interests in two of the most important markets for
American farmers, ranchers, and agribusinesses. This high-standard
agreement builds upon our existing markets to expand United States food and
agricultural exports and support food processing and rural jobs.
Canada and Mexico are our
first and second largest export markets for United States food and
agricultural products, totaling more than $39.7 billion food and
agricultural exports in 2018. These exports support more than 325,000
American jobs.
All food and agricultural
products that have zero tariffs under the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) will remain at zero tariffs. Since the original NAFTA did
not eliminate all tariffs on agricultural trade between the United States
and Canada, the USMCA will create new market access opportunities for
United States exports to Canada of dairy, poultry, and eggs, and in
exchange the United States will provide new access to Canada for some
dairy, peanut, and a limited amount of sugar and sugar-containing products.
In September, all former
U.S. Secretaries of Agriculture since President Reagan’s Administration
announced support for USMCA. In a letter to Congressional leaders, former
Secretaries John Block (Reagan), Mike Espy (Clinton), Dan Glickman
(Clinton), Ann Veneman (W. Bush), Mike Johanns (W. Bush), Ed Shafer (W.
Bush), and Tom Vilsack (Obama) underscored the importance of passing USMCA
saying, “We need a strong and reliable trade deal with our top two
customers for U.S. agriculture products. USMCA will provide certainty in
the North American market for the U.S. farm sector and rural economy. We
strongly support ratification of USMCA.”
Key Provision: Increasing
Dairy Market Access
·
America’s dairy
farmers will have expanded market opportunities in Canada for a wide
variety of dairy products. Canada agreed to eliminate the unfair Class 6
and 7 milk pricing programs that allowed their farmers to undersell U.S.
producers.
Key Provision:
Biotechnology
·
For the first
time, the agreement specifically addresses agricultural biotechnology –
including new technologies such as gene editing – to support innovation and
reduce trade-distorting policies.
Key Provision:
Geographical Indications
·
The agreement
institutes a more rigorous process for establishing geographical indicators
and lays out additional factors to be considered in determining whether a
term is a common name.
Key Provision:
Sanitary/Phytosanitary Measures
·
The three
countries agree to strengthen disciplines for science-based measures that
protect human, animal, and plant health while improving the flow of trade.
Key Provision: Poultry
and Eggs
·
U.S. poultry producers
will have expanded access to Canada for chicken, turkey, and eggs.
Key Provision: Wheat
·
Canada agrees to
terminate its discriminatory wheat grading system, enabling U.S. growers to
be more competitive.
Key Provision: Wine and
Spirits
·
The three
countries agree to avoid technical barriers to trade through
non-discrimination and transparency regarding sale, distribution, labeling,
and certification of wine and distilled spirits.
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