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FACT
SHEET:
U.S.-Colombia Trade
Promotion Agreement -
Colorado Farmers Will Benefit
September 2008

Printer Friendly Version
The U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement (CTPA) provides increased access
for Colorado’s agricultural exports by making agricultural trade a two-way
street and leveling the playing field with respect to third country competitors
in the Colombian market. Already our largest market in South America, Colombia
now holds even greater potential because it has agreed to immediately eliminate
duties on 53 percent of current U.S. trade upon implementation of the agreement.
The American Farm Bureau and over 40 other agricultural industry and farm groups
strongly support the agreement by stating "the agreement will provide U.S.
products exported to Colombia with the same duty-free access already granted to
Colombian products exported to the U.S."
Exports of farm products boost Colorado’s farm prices and income. Such
exports support about 11,720 jobs both on and off the farm in food processing,
storage, and transportation. Agricultural exports amounted to $1.1 Billion and
made an important contribution to Colorado's farm cash receipts in 2007 that
totaled $6.2 billion.
Beef.
In 2007, the United States exported $386,000 of beef and beef products
to Colombia.
Colorado’s ranchers and beef industry lead the state with more than
$3.1 billion in farm cash receipts.
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Colombia will immediately eliminate its
80-percent duty (108 percent allowed by the World Trade Organization (WTO)
on beef products of most importance to the U.S. beef industry—prime and
choice cuts.
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U.S. exporters of standard quality beef cuts
will enjoy immediate duty-free access through a 2,100-ton TRQ. The TRQ will
grow by 5 percent, compounded annually. Colombia will phase out the
80-percent out-of-quota tariff over 10 years after a 37.5-percent cut at the
beginning of the first year of implementation.
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U.S. exporters of variety meats (offals) will
immediately receive duty-free access under a 4,642-ton TRQ that will grow
5.5 percent, compounded annually. The 80-percent over-quota tariff will be
phased out over 10 years.
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Colombia agreed to continue to recognize the
equivalence of the U.S. meat inspection and certification system to its own
system.
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Colombian exporters of beef to the United
States will receive duty-free access under a 5,250-ton TRQ that will grow 5
percent, compounded annually. The United States will phase out its beef
tariffs over 10 years. For those beef lines that are already duty free under
the Andean Trade Promotion and Drug Eradication Act, the CTPA will continue
the duty-free treatment.
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The American Meat Institute; National
Cattlemen’s Beef Association; U.S. Hide, Skin and Leather Association; U.S.
Livestock Genetics Export, Inc.; and Pet Food Institute publicly support the
CTPA.
Dairy. U.S. dairy exports to Colombia surpassed $6.6 million in 2007, and
changes with the CTPA will provide immediate opportunities for U.S. dairy
producers. Colorado dairy producers provide the state’s second largest source of
farm cash receipts.
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U.S. dairy producers currently face a system
of variable levies (price band system) that results in tariffs as high as
the WTO ceiling of 159 percent. Colombia will immediately eliminate the
price band system on U.S. imports.
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Colombia will immediately eliminate tariffs
on whey.
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Both Colombia and the United States will
establish duty-free TRQs for certain dairy products totaling 9,900 tons,
with these TRQs growing by 10 percent, compounded annually.
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All Colombian duties on dairy products will
be eliminated within 15 years, with duties on some eliminated earlier.
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The National Milk Producers Federation, U.S.
Dairy Export Council, Grocery Manufacturers Association/Food Products
Association, and International Dairy Foods Association publicly support the
CTPA.
Corn.
In 2007, the United States exported $500 million of
yellow corn and $16 million of white corn to Colombia. Providing the
fourth largest source of farm cash receipts, Colorado corn producers will
benefit from the CTPA.
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Under the CTPA, Colombia will immediately
eliminate its system of variable levies (price band system) facing U.S.
exporters. Under the system, tariffs can be as high as the WTO ceiling of
195 percent on some corn products.
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Colombia will provide immediate duty-free
access for yellow corn by establishing a 2.1-million-ton TRQ that grows 5
percent, compounded annually. Colombia will phase out the over-quota tariff
over 12 years.
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Colombia will provide immediate duty-free
access for white corn by establishing a 136,500-ton TRQ that grows 5
percent, compounded annually. Colombia will phase out the over-quota tariff
over 12 years.
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Colombia will provide immediate duty-free
access for animal feeds by establishing a 194,250-ton TRQ that grows 5
percent, compounded annually. Colombia will phase out the over-quota tariff
over 12 years.
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All currently applied duties on all other
corn products will be phased out within 10 years.
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The Corn Refiners Association, the National
Corn Growers Association, the National Grain and Feed Association, the North
American Export Grain Association, the North American Millers’ Association,
the American Feed Industry Association, and the Pet Food Institute publicly
support the CTPA.
Wheat:
In 2007, the United States exported $210 million of wheat and barley to
Colombia. Colorado’s wheat exports were $337 million in 2007. Wheat growers
will benefit from this agreement.
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U.S. wheat and barely producers currently
face a system of variable levies (price band system) that results in tariffs
as high as the WTO ceiling of 248 percent. Colombia will immediately
eliminate the price band system on imports from the United States.
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Colombia will immediately eliminate all
tariffs on wheat and wheat products, which currently face duties ranging
from 5–20 percent.
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Colombia will immediately eliminate all
tariffs on barley and barley products, except feed barley. Tariffs on feed
barley will be eliminated in 2009.
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The National Association of Wheat Growers,
the National Grain and Feed Association, the North American Export Grain
Association, the North American Millers’ Association, the National Barley
Growers Association, U.S. Wheat Associates, and the American Bakers
Association publicly support the CTPA.
Sugar. In 2007, the United States exported $9.4
million of sugar and sweeteners to Colombia. There will be no reductions in the U.S. over-quota duty that
currently provides the equivalent of a 100-percent tariff protection for
domestic producers including the 4 percent of Colorado farms engaged in sugar
production.
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U.S. sugar producers currently face a system
of variable levies (price band system) in Colombia that results in tariffs
as high as the WTO ceiling of 130 percent. Colombia will immediately
eliminate the price band system on U.S. imports.
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Colombia will provide immediate duty-free
access for glucose, which currently faces a 20-percent duty (28 percent
allowed by the WTO), through a 10,500-ton TRQ that expands 5 percent
annually. Colombia will phase out the 28-percent over-quota tariff over 10
years.
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Colombia will eliminate duties within 15
years for all other sugar and sweeteners. In a few cases, duties will be
eliminated sooner (such as high fructose corn syrup in 9 years).
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The United States will establish a 50,000-ton
TRQ for Colombia for sugar products covered by the WTO TRQ. This amount
grows by 1.5 percent a year into perpetuity.
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Provisions will ensure that Colombia will
only ship when it is a net surplus exporter, and provisions have been agreed
to allow alternative forms of compensation to be established to facilitate
sugar stock management by the United States.
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The Sweetener Users Association and Grocery
Manufacturers Association/Food Products Association publicly support the
CTPA.
Back to the
U.S.–Colombia Trade
Promotion Agreement
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