MEXICO CITY—The Mexican government said the country’s tomato growers face more than $350 million a year in losses from U.S. anti-dumping duties on their exports as the U.S. Commerce Department terminated an agreement that had suspended the duties since 1996. The Economy Ministry said it was “disappointed and concerned” about the U.S. decision to terminate the suspension agreement, which had set minimum prices for tomato imports and kept Mexican tomato exports to the U.S. tariff-free for decades.
Source: Wall Street Journal May 07, 2019 20:05 UTC