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NAFTA and the Small Mexican Farmer. Daryll E. Ray Director, Agricultural Policy Analysis Center Melissa B. Cooney, Graduate Research Assistant University of Tennessee. History of NAFTA. GATT – General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (1946). Direct result of the 1930s and WWII
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NAFTA and the Small Mexican Farmer Daryll E. Ray Director, Agricultural Policy Analysis Center Melissa B. Cooney, Graduate Research Assistant University of Tennessee
History of NAFTA GATT – General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (1946) • Direct result of the 1930s and WWII • Conflicts over trade seen as one cause of war • International interdependence seen as inhibiting war • Restructuring world economy based on comparative advantage and free trade • Tariffs detrimental to all parties • Tariffs should be eliminated
History of NAFTA • 1970s and 1980s • Economic problems in the U.S. • Stagflation • 1980s to early 1990s • U.S. needed new markets to grow economy • Fall of Soviet Union • Mexico’s debt crisis and stagnant economy • Mexico joins GATT in 1986 • January 1, 1994 • U.S.-Canada agreement expanded to include Mexico - NAFTA
NAFTA’s Provisions for Free Trade • Objectives • Eliminate barriers to trade • Promote fair competition • Increase investment opportunities • Protect intellectual property rights • Establish a framework for future agreements
The Argument for NAFTA • Economic theory • Adjustment periods • Comparative advantages of U.S. & Mexico • U.S. in grain production, animals and animal products, and oilseeds • Mexico in vegetables, fruits, fresh flowers, and beverages
The Argument against NAFTA • Mexico’s “comparative advantage” is only for very specialized products that are capital intensive, few producers, and have higher risk and costs • Not self-sufficient • Large, efficient agribusinesses with access to technological advances benefit from NAFTA • Economic models do not account for social welfare
NAFTA By the Numbers • By the numbers, NAFTA is a success for Mexico • 1994 – 2000: Total trade volume has increased from $297 billion to $676 billion • Mexico exported $154 billion to NAFTA partners in 2000 • Growth in Mexico’s exports has contributed to more than half of the real GDP growth in Mexico • Investment in Mexico has grown by 72% • 2.7 million new jobs generated in Mexico • More than half of those new jobs were related to export activity • Manufacturing exports pay nearly 40% more than other manufacturing jobs Source: NAFTA at Seven, 2001. Pettigrew, Zoellick, and Derbez
A Growing Dependency Source: Office of Trade and Analysis, US Department of Commerce
A Growing Dependency Source: Office of Trade and Analysis, US Department of Commerce
NAFTA and Agricultural Trade • Agricultural exports from Mexico to US totaled ~ $4.7 billion in 1998, up from a stagnant $2.5 billion prior to NAFTA. • Mexican agricultural exports have grown about 11.5% per year. Vegetables ~ 13% annual increase Fruits ~ 17% annual increase Beverages ~ 28% annual increase Source: US-Mexico Chamber of Commerce, 1999
Agriculture under NAFTA • Immediately eliminated most non-tariff barriers and many tariffs • Phasing out all tariffs and Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs) over 10-15 years i.e. Between US and Mexico: Wheat 2004 Sugar 2007 Corn 2008
Take Corn: What NAFTA was Supposed to do? • Reduce domestic price of corn • Output will decrease • Labor, land and capital are reallocated • Marginal lands left fallow
The Importance of Corn in Mexico • Originated in Mexico over 7000 years ago • Pre-NAFTA: Over 3 million producers = 8% of population 40% of people in agriculture 60% of cultivated land Nearly 60% of output by value Source: The Environmental and Social Impacts of Economic Liberalization on Corn Production in Mexico.Alejandro Nadal, 2000.
Corn Diversity • 41 landraces, thousands of varieties • Poor producers with low yields could compete in the Mexican domestic market. • 1.8 million corn producers use locally adapted varieties (80 % of the corn cultivation)
Failure to impose the TRQ • 2-level pricing: Low tariff up to a certain quota, high tariff after passing the quota • 15-year transition period shortened to three years because Mexican government never implemented the TRQ
Mexico imports of US corn Imports increased 14-fold Source: APAC, Centro de Estadistica Agropecuaria
Area under corn cultivation Source: Centro de Estadística Agropecuaria Sistema de Información Agropecuaria de Consulta
Corn production in Mexico Source: Centro de Estadística Agropecuaria Sistema de Información Agropecuaria de Consulta
What has happened • Corn production has remained fairly stable but area under cultivation has increased. • Went from 60% of cultivated land yielding 60% of Agricultural output value to 67% yielding 36% of value of output. • Environmental damage by both large and small farmers.
What has happened • Tortilla prices increased • Elimination of guaranteed price floor subsidy • Urban migration • Further Dependency Source: Down on the Farm: NAFTA’s Seven-Year’s War on Farmers and Ranchers in the US, Canada and Mexico. Public Citizen 2001
Conclusions • NAFTA has obviously benefited Mexico’s overall economy • GDP levels from $314.5 billion in 1991 to $617.8 billion • Small farmers lose out big time • GDP is not only measure of well-being • Access to food & adequate housing • Health services and education, etc.
Weekly Policy Column To receive an electronic version of our weekly ag policy column send an email to: dray@utk.edu requesting to be added to APAC’s Policy Pennings listserv
For More Information … www.agpolicy.org Agricultural Policy Analysis Center The University of Tennessee Dept. of Agricultural Economics 310 Morgan Hall Knoxville, TN 37996-4519 dray@utk.edu (865) 974-7407 phone (865) 974-7298 fax
Maquiladoras in Mexico Source: Maquila online directory
Maquiladora map As of Jan. 2001 > 601 (1280) 251 – 600 101 - 250 76 – 100 26 – 75 1 – 25 0 Source: Instituto Nacional de Estadistica, Geografia, e Informacion
Maquiladora working conditions • Discrimination against women • Poor working conditions • Low wages • No union representation • Slum communities
The Link between Corn Producers and Maquiladoras • Pre-NAFTA: ~3 million corn producers 2002 ~ 2 million corn producers Pre-NAFTA (1990): 449,519 maquila workers (1995): 629,481 (2000): 1,277,727 Source: Border Maquiladoras, an Overview. Frontera Norte Sur, Sept 2000 As of Feb 2003: 1,047,587 Source: Maquila Online Directory