Tomato Suspension Agreements and the Effects on Market Prices and Farm Revenue

The production capacity of the US tomato industry has decreased significantly in the past decade. The US Department of Commerce and the Mexican tomato industry negotiated and signed several Suspension Agreements that set floor prices for imported Mexican fresh tomatoes to protect the US domestic in...

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Main Authors: Zhengfei Guan, Dong Hee Suh, Feng Wu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries 2018-04-01
Series:EDIS
Subjects:
Online Access:https://192.168.36.130/edis/article/view/105007
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author Zhengfei Guan
Dong Hee Suh
Feng Wu
author_facet Zhengfei Guan
Dong Hee Suh
Feng Wu
author_sort Zhengfei Guan
collection DOAJ
description The production capacity of the US tomato industry has decreased significantly in the past decade. The US Department of Commerce and the Mexican tomato industry negotiated and signed several Suspension Agreements that set floor prices for imported Mexican fresh tomatoes to protect the US domestic industry. This 4-page article written by Zhengfei Guan, Dong Hee Suh, and Feng Wu and published by the UF/IFAS Food and Resource Economics Department provides a review of the history of the suspension agreements and an analysis of their effects on the US tomato industry. http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/fe1025
format Article
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institution OA Journals
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language English
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publisher The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries
record_format Article
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spelling doaj-art-d42d441b429c45258301f70ac7f42dbf2025-08-20T02:10:13ZengThe University of Florida George A. Smathers LibrariesEDIS2576-00092018-04-012018210.32473/edis-fe1025-2017Tomato Suspension Agreements and the Effects on Market Prices and Farm RevenueZhengfei Guan0Dong Hee Suh1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6154-3864Feng Wu2University of FloridaKorea UniversityUniversity of Florida The production capacity of the US tomato industry has decreased significantly in the past decade. The US Department of Commerce and the Mexican tomato industry negotiated and signed several Suspension Agreements that set floor prices for imported Mexican fresh tomatoes to protect the US domestic industry. This 4-page article written by Zhengfei Guan, Dong Hee Suh, and Feng Wu and published by the UF/IFAS Food and Resource Economics Department provides a review of the history of the suspension agreements and an analysis of their effects on the US tomato industry. http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/fe1025 https://192.168.36.130/edis/article/view/105007FE1025Tomato
spellingShingle Zhengfei Guan
Dong Hee Suh
Feng Wu
Tomato Suspension Agreements and the Effects on Market Prices and Farm Revenue
EDIS
FE1025
Tomato
title Tomato Suspension Agreements and the Effects on Market Prices and Farm Revenue
title_full Tomato Suspension Agreements and the Effects on Market Prices and Farm Revenue
title_fullStr Tomato Suspension Agreements and the Effects on Market Prices and Farm Revenue
title_full_unstemmed Tomato Suspension Agreements and the Effects on Market Prices and Farm Revenue
title_short Tomato Suspension Agreements and the Effects on Market Prices and Farm Revenue
title_sort tomato suspension agreements and the effects on market prices and farm revenue
topic FE1025
Tomato
url https://192.168.36.130/edis/article/view/105007
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AT dongheesuh tomatosuspensionagreementsandtheeffectsonmarketpricesandfarmrevenue
AT fengwu tomatosuspensionagreementsandtheeffectsonmarketpricesandfarmrevenue