Avocados, Chili Peppers, Beer: Where Mexico Border Tax Would Hit

  • Mexican food, drink imports into U.S. were $21 billion in 2015
  • Biggest categories are vegetables, fruit, wine and beer

Trump’s Mexico Border Tax Would Hit Avocados and Beer

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The 20 percent tax on imports floated by the Trump administration would affect a wide range of agricultural goods. Mexico exported $21 billion of food and drink north of the border in 2015, according to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Despite running an overall trade deficit with Mexico, U.S. food and drink exports to its southern neighbor don’t lag far behind, at $17.7 billion for 2015. The U.S. typically carries a trade surplus with its southern partner in years when grain and oilseed prices are high, as they were for most of the previous decade. Mexico was the biggest buyer of U.S. corn, soybean meal, rice and dairy products in 2015.