Monday, December 23, 2024

Mexico’s agricultural trade surplus up 8% in first half of year

Mexico registered an agri-food trade surplus of US $5.3 billion in the first six months of 2023, led by exports of beer, tequila, avocados, tomatoes and berries.

The country exported US $27.5 billion of agri-food produce from January to June, a 5.38% increase from the same period in 2022 – the highest figure registered in 31 years.

Modelo beer
Beer topped the list in export revenue, bringing in US $2.97 billion. (James Kern/Unsplash)

Meanwhile, agri-food imports totaled US $22.2 billion, according to figures from the Agriculture and Rural Development Ministry (Sader). The resulting trade surplus showed a year-on-year increase of US $402 million, or 8.19%. It is the ninth consecutive year that Mexico has registered a trade surplus in the agri-food sector.

The total surplus was made up of US $1.3 billion in the agricultural and fishing sector and  US $4 billion in the agro-industrial sector, which produces processed foodstuffs and other agricultural products.

Nearly half of all agri-food export revenue in 2023 came from just six products: beer, tequila, berries, tomatoes, avocados and beef.

Beer and tequila maintained their place as Mexico’s leading agri-food exports, generating US $2.97 billion and US $2.35 billion, respectively.

Strawberries
Mexico’s berry industry, which topped the list of exports in January and February, slipped to fifth in the mid-year rankings. (silviacozzi/Depositphotos)

Avocados – sometimes dubbed “green gold” due to their high retail prices and relatively low production costs – generated US $1.6 billion, following a 12-month period in which Mexico exported a record 1.13 million tonnes of the fruit to the United States.

Avocado export volumes showed an annual increase of 48.8%, according to an analysis by the Agricultural Markets Consulting Group (GCMA). However, there was a 52% drop in the price of the fruit, threatening its place as Mexico’s top unprocessed agricultural export by revenue.

Tomatoes came a close fourth in the agri-food ranking with US $1.5 billion of exports, according to Sader, while strawberries and raspberries came fifth with US $1.28 billion, despite originally topping the ranking in the first two months of this year.

Exports which registered the highest growth were soybean oil (163%), live cattle (52.8%), butter, fat and cocoa oil (47.6%), coffee, tea and yerba maté (39.3%) and pasta (35%).

With reports from T21 and El Universal

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Two photos, one of U.S. President-elect Trump and another of Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum

Trump promises to designate Mexican cartels as terrorist organizations: Sheinbaum responds

0
President Sheinbaum responded with forceful rhetoric to the announcement, which would open the door to U.S. intervention in Mexico.
Nuevo Laredo

Over 20,000 immigrants form annual holiday convoy to Sierra Gorda via Laredo

0
Each year, Mexicans living in the U.S. make a plan to meet in Laredo, Texas, to advance as a group toward Mexico for the holidays.
Floating rigs of a Pemex offshore oil drilling field, made possible by suppliers of goods and services

With state oil company Pemex behind on payments, small suppliers face financial crisis

3
Small Gulf Coast subcontractors are struggling to pay Christmas bonuses and other end-of-year obligations, or even shutting down entirely.