MEXICO CITY---Every weekday, Antonio Godinez Vera turns imported American corn into feed for Mexican livestock. Some of that U.S. corn is also used to make tortillas, a staple of the Mexican diet. Corn is also a symbol of Mexico itself. Corn was born in Mexico 9000 years ago. There's even an expression here, "Sin maíz no hay pais," ('without corn there's no country.') Legislation has been proposed in Mexico City to boycott U.S. corn in response to a suite of economic threats against Mexico voiced by President Donald Trump.
"A boycott could certainly hurt us," Godinez told me in Spanish as the din of his corn mill echoed through a complex of machines and metal kernel grinders. Trucks laden with imported American corn sat in his lot. A boycott would also hurt U.S. corn growers from the Dakotas to the Midwest to Arizona and Texas. Mexico’s deputy economy minister Juan Carlos Baker told the Financial Times that negotiations are underway with Argentina and Brazil to offer them duty-free access to the Mexican market now enjoyed by U.S. growers under the terms of the North American Free Trade Agreement. As a candidate Mr Trump calledNafta the "worst trade deal" ever signed in this country.
Mexican Senator Armando Rios Piter has proposed the boycott. "Corn is from Mexico, from my country. So right now it's an important position in nationalistic way but also in terms of trade," he said at the door of the Senate chamber.
Rios Piter said Brazilian corn is cheaper, though critics say he hasn't factored in the cost of moving corn from South America rather than the U.S. He countered by saying the legislation under consideration isn't strictly about cost but about Mexico asserting itself in its relationship with Washington.
"When you have such a bully in Washington, me as a Mexican senator, as a Mexican citizen, I need to say this very loud and clear. Mexico is a serious player. Mexico has been a friend but it can stop collaborating and take those kinds of decisions," he told me.
The U.S. Grains Council, a trade group that helps U.S. growers export their product, has a full-time presence in Mexico. The council said it is concerned that "Mexican buyers feel they need to look at alternate suppliers, which could affect U.S. market share."
Luis Ribera studies the economics of agriculture at Texas A&M University. He empathized with that concern. "We send 2.6 billion dollars (annually) worth of corn to Mexico," said Ribera, adding that U.S. corn growers he speaks with are similarly concerned.
"It adds a lot of risk to a market that we have dominated because we're very competitive at producing corn, high quality corn," Ribera continued. "And we have the advantage of having our market right next to us."
The idea of retaliating against the U.S. appears, at least anecdotally, to be popular on the street in Mexico. But it is unclear if Senator Rios Piter, now an independent politician having renounced his membership in the leftist PRD (Partido Revolucionario Democrático) will generate enough support for a boycott that could speak social unrest.
"We're going to have higher prices for one of our staple foods," if a boycott materialized said Victor Hugo Michel, chief editor at El Financiero television here. "Approximately 70 per cent of Mexicans consume more than 90 kilograms of corn a year. This means that if those Mexicans paid more for their tortillas, we could have social instability," he expained.
Mexico's ruling PRI government (Partido Revolucionario Institucional) is heading into a federal election next year. And it can't afford that risk. So this threatened boycott is unlikely to become reality. But the threat itself is also unlikely to go away given the current state of Mexico-U.S. relations, especially given pending decisions by the Trump administration regarding the future of NAFTA, the plan to expand the border wall or the threat to impose a "border tax" of 20 per cent on Mexican exports to the United States.