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FACT
SHEET:
U.S.-Peru Trade
Promotion Agreement -
Colorado Farmers Will Benefit
November 2007

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The U.S.-Peru Trade Promotion Agreement (PTPA) provides increased market
access to 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 Peruvian market. With immediate elimination of duties on nearly 90
percent of current U.S. trade to Peru, the PTPA will provide Colorado producers
and exporters the opportunity not only to preserve but to increase market share
in Peru. The American Farm Bureau and over 40 other agricultural industry and
farm groups strongly support the agreement stating that the agreement would
benefit all U.S. agricultural sectors and allow the United States to become a
competitive supplier of agricultural products to Peru.
Exports of farm products boost Colorado’s farm prices and income. Such
exports support about 10,100 jobs both on and off the farm in food processing,
storage, and transportation. Agricultural exports amounted to $852 million and
made an important contribution to Colorado's farm cash receipts in 2006 that
totaled $5.6 billion.
Beef. As the leading
source of farm cash receipts at nearly $3.3 billion, Colorado’s ranchers and
beef industry benefit from the PTPA.
- Peru will immediately eliminate the 25-percent
duties (30-percent allowed by the World Trade Organization (WTO)) on the
beef products of most importance to the U.S. beef industry – Prime and
Choice cuts.
- U.S. exporters of variety meats (offals) will
immediately receive duty-free access under a 10,000-ton tariff-rate quota (TRQ)
that will grow six percent compounded annually. The 12-percent over-quota
tariff will be phased out over ten years.
- Peru will provide immediate duty-free access for
U.S. exports of standard quality beef through the establishment of an
800-ton TRQ that will grow six percent compounded annually. The 25-percent
over-quota tariff will be phased out over 11 years.
- The United States will phase out its beef tariffs
over 15 years except for those tariffs that are already duty-free under the
Andean Trade Promotion and Drug Eradication Act (ATPDEA). The PTPA will
continue the duty-free treatment.
- Peru agreed to continue to recognize the
equivalence of the U.S. meat inspection and certification system to its own
system.
- The American Meat Institute, the National
Cattlemen’s Beef Association, the National Renderers Association, the U.S.
Meat Export Federation, the US Hides, Skin and Leather Association, U.S.
Livestock Genetics Export, Inc., and the Pet Food Institute publicly support
the PTPA.
Dairy. Providing the
second largest source of state farm cash receipts, Colorado’s dairy producers
benefit from the PTPA.
- Under the PTPA, Peru will immediately eliminate its
system of variable levies (price bands) facing U.S. exporters. Under the
system, tariffs can be as high as the WTO ceiling of 68 percent on some
dairy products.
- Peru will immediately eliminate tariffs on whey.
- Both Peru and the United States will establish
duty-free TRQs for certain dairy products totaling 10,000 tons.
- TRQs will grow by ten percent compounded annually,
with certain dairy products subject to safeguards during the tariff
phase-out period.
- All Peruvian duties on dairy products will be
eliminated within 17 years, with duties on some dairy products eliminated
earlier.
- The National Milk Producers Federation, the U.S.
Dairy Export Council, the Grocery Manufacturers of America, the
International Dairy Foods Association, and the Food Products Association
publicly support the PTPA.
Corn. Providing the
fourth largest source of farm cash receipts, Colorado corn producers benefit
from the PTPA.
- Under the PTPA, Peru will immediately eliminate its
system of variable levies (price bands) facing U.S. exporters. Under the
system, tariffs can be as high as the WTO ceiling of 68 percent on some corn
products.
- Peru will provide immediate duty-free access by
establishing a 500,000-ton TRQ that grows six percent compounded annually.
Peru will phase out the over-quota tariff over 12 years.
- All currently applied duties on crude corn oil will
be phased out over three years; on high fructose corn syrup over five years;
and on white corn and other corn products within ten years.
- The Corn Refiners Association, the National Corn
Growers Association, the National Grain and Feed Association, the National
Grains Trade Council, the North American Export Grain Association, the North
American Millers’ Association, the American Feed Industry Association, and
the Pet Food Institute publicly support the PTPA.
Pork. As the seventh
largest source of state farm cash receipts, Colorado’s pork producers benefit
from the PTPA.
- Peru will phase out all duties, which are currently
as high as 25 percent (30 percent allowed by the WTO), on fresh, chilled and
frozen pork as well as on smoked and dried pork within five years.
- Peru will immediately eliminate duties on bacon and
will phase out tariffs on processed pork products within seven years.
- Peru agreed to continue to recognize the
equivalence of the U.S. meat inspection and certification system.
- The National Pork Producers Council, the American
Meat Institute, the U.S. Meat Export Federation, the National Renderers
Association, the US Hides, Skin and Leather Association, and the Pet Food
Institute publicly support the PTPA.
Wheat and Barley.
Providing over $198 million in farm cash receipts, Colorado’s wheat and barley
producers benefit from the PTPA.
- Peru will immediately eliminate the 17-percent
tariff (up to 68 percent allowed by the WTO on certain wheat products) on
wheat imports from the United States as well as the 17 to 25-percent tariff
(30 percent allowed by the WTO) on barley imports.
- Peru will immediately eliminate tariffs on
processed wheat products and on barley malt.
- The National Association of Wheat Growers, the
National Grain and Feed Association, the National Grain Trade Council, the
North American Export Grain Association, the Wheat Export Trade Education
Committee, the North American Millers’ Association, the National Barley
Growers Association, and the American Bakers Association publicly support
the PTPA.
Sugar. 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 one-percent
of Colorado’s farms engaged in sugar production.
- The United States will establish a 9,000-ton TRQ
for Peru. This amount grows very slowly by two percent a year into
perpetuity, so that by year 15 of the PTPA implementation, the TRQ will be
11,520 tons. The United States will also establish a 2,000-ton TRQ for
specialty sugar goods from Peru. The specialty sugar TRQ will not grow.
- Provisions will ensure that Peru 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.
- The Sweetener Users Association, the Grocery
Manufacturers of America, and the Food Products Association have expressed
support publicly for the PTPA.
Back to the
U.S.–Peru Trade
Promotion Agreement
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