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ASA Supports the Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement
April 8, 2008… Saint Louis, Missouri… The American Soybean
Association (ASA) today expressed its strong support for passage of the
Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement (TPA). ASA’s announcement of support
followed formal action by President George W. Bush yesterday when he
sent the Colombia Trade Agreement to Congress for ratification.
Congress now has 90 legislative days to either approve or
reject the agreement.
"Colombia has become an important market for U.S. soy and livestock
exports, and this agreement will allow our exports to grow further,"
said American Soybean Association President John Hoffman, a soybean
producer from Waterloo, Iowa. "As Canada and other countries negotiate
similar agreements with Colombia, this agreement is needed to help the
U.S. soybean industry maintain its competitive edge."
U.S. soybean exports to Colombia in calendar year 2007 were valued at
over $91 million as compared to less than $31 million 2003. Soybean meal
exports totaled $77 million last year compared with just $11 million in
2003. And soybean oil exports are now valued at over $7 million, ten
times what they were in 2003.
Under this agreement, Colombia will immediately eliminate tariffs on
soybeans and soy meal and flour. It will provide immediate
duty-free access for crude soybean oil through a 31,200-ton quota with
four percent annual growth and will phase-out the out-of-quota tariff of
24 percent for crude soybean oil over 10 years. Colombia also will
phase-out its 24 percent tariff for refined soybean oil over 5 years.
In addition, Colombia will immediately eliminate its price-band
system for imports from the United States. Colombia has long made use of
a price-band system to limit and control agricultural imports through
variable duties that fluctuate based on changes in world prices. The
price band is currently applied to imports of U.S. oilseed and products,
as well as to imports of U.S. corn, rice, wheat, dairy, pork, poultry
and sugar.
Exports of these products will be expanded as a result of the
elimination of Colombia’s barriers to imports from the United States
under the agreement. The American Farm Bureau Federation predicts that
the agreement, once fully implemented, could provide $690 million in
gains each year for U.S. agriculture.
Finally, over 90 percent of Colombia’s total exports to the United
States, and 99.5 percent of its agricultural exports, already enter the
United States duty free because of existing trade preferences granted to
Andean countries under the Andean Trade Preference Act, as well as under
the Generalized System of Preferences system. The Colombia TPA will
eliminate duties on U.S. exports to Colombia to provide a more balanced
trade relationship between the countries. Thus, this agreement assuredly
is in the economic interests of U.S. workers, farmers, and ranchers.
"We urge the Members of Congress to make the right decision and
approve this beneficial trade agreement to strengthen our ties with
Colombia and support U.S. exports," Hoffman concluded. "If this
agreement is rejected, the United States will miss the opportunity to
give U.S. products and workers greater access to the Colombian market.
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For more information contact:
John Hoffman, ASA President, (319) 290-5042, jhoffman@neotek.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, (314) 576-1770,
bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at http://www.soygrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm
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