FACT
SHEET:
Trade and Agriculture:
What's at Stake for Louisiana
September 2008
Louisiana produces agricultural products that
are exported worldwide. Louisiana's farm cash
receipts were $2.7 billion in 2007, and its
agricultural exports were estimated at $695
million in 2007. Agricultural exports help boost
farm prices and income, while supporting about
7,406 jobs both on the farm and off the farm in
food processing, storage, and transportation.
Exports are important to Louisiana's
agricultural and statewide economy. Measured as
exports divided by farm cash receipts, the
State's reliance on agricultural exports was 25
percent in 2007.
Louisiana’s top agricultural exports in 2007
were:
cotton – $153 million
rice – $144 million
feed grains and products -- $136 million
soybeans and products -- $106 million
wheat and products -- $47 million
World demand is increasing, but so is
competition among suppliers. If Louisiana's
farmers, ranchers, and food processors are to
compete successfully for the export
opportunities of the 21st century, they need
fair trade and more open access to
growing global markets.
How Trade Agreements Benefit Louisiana
Agriculture
Rice, Louisiana’s number one export, will
benefit tremendously from recently negotiated
trade agreements. Under the U.S.-Chile FTA,
Chile’s import tariff on U.S. rice falls from 6
percent to zero over 12 years. Rice will be
subject to price-based safeguards until tariffs
are eliminated. If Congress ratifies the US –
Dominican and Central American FTA in its
current form, U.S. rice exporters gain
preferential access through duty free in-quota
access as out-of-quota tariffs are eliminated
during 18 to 20-year transition periods. During
this transition period, volume-based safeguards
are available to the Central American countries.
Quotas and their growth rates vary depending on
the country and type of rice.
Louisiana has benefited from the opening of
the Japanese rice market under the Uruguay
Round. Japan opened its market to 375,000 tons
of imported rice in 1995; by 2000, the
tariff-rate quota had expanded to 682,200 tons.
As a result, Japan has emerged as one of the
largest export markets for U.S. rice.
Louisiana benefits under NAFTA with new rules
of origin that increase demand for U.S. textiles
in Canada and Mexico. Mexico’s 10-percent tariff
on cotton has been eliminated. This tariff
reduction supports U.S. cotton exports to
Mexico, which rose from 558,000 bales to 2.2
million bales from marketing year 1995 to 2002.
U.S. industry estimates that the Caribbean Basin
Initiative and Africa Growth and Opportunity Act
will increase annual cotton sales by 100,000
bales.
Export Success Stories
Since its launch in 2000, Cotton Council
International (CCI) and Cotton Incorporated’s
COTTON USA Sourcing Program, funded by FMD and
checkoff resources, has dramatically enhanced
the level of U.S-made cotton textile exports to
the Caribbean Basin. Cotton yarn exports to the
region increased from $30 million in 1999 to
$205 million in 2003. Meanwhile, knit fabric
exports skyrocketed from $21 million to $618
million. CCI and Cotton Incorporated achieved
these results by partnering the two
organizations and their respective marketing and
technical strengths, and by market development
outreach to the supply chain and retail
industries in the United States and supplying
countries. The resulting business contacts have
now become established trading relationships
that compete favorably with products from
anywhere in the world.