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Trump's Threatened Tariffs on Colombia Put Trade in Oil, Coffee and ...

Trumps Threatened Tariffs on Colombia Put Trade in Oil Coffee and
Colombia is a relatively minor trading partner to the United States, but some industries are much more exposed than others.

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Coffee and Flowers in Focus Amid U.S.-Colombia Trade Tensions

Colombia is a relatively minor trading partner to the United States, but some industries are much more exposed than others.

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A man wearing a straw hat with a blue and red design picks red coffee berries.
A worker picks coffee berries at a plantation in Anolaima, Colombia, in December. Coffee is one of the main Colombian imports to the United States.Credit...Luisa Gonzalez/Reuters
  • Published Jan. 26, 2025Updated Jan. 27, 2025, 5:00 a.m. ET

The possibility of a trade war between the United States and Colombia briefly erupted on Sunday that threatened to make coffee, flowers and raw materials more expensive for Americans, and put billions of dollars in sales for U.S. corn growers and chemical companies at risk.

Relations between the two countries quickly deteriorated after the South American country refused to receive U.S. military planes carrying deported immigrants. In response, President Trump said on social media that he would immediately impose tariffs on all Colombian imports and Colombia’s president, Gustavo Petro, threatened his own tariffs hours later.

Late on Sunday, the leaders appeared to settle their differences, with Colombia’s foreign ministry saying that it would allow U.S. military planes to fly deportees into the country and “guarantee dignified conditions.” As a result, tariffs would be “held in reserve,” according to a White House statement.

The United States is Colombia’s largest trading partner, but Colombian products make up a relatively minor share of U.S. imports. Some Colombian products are much more exposed than others.

Crude oil is by far the United States’ most valuable Colombian import, accounting for $5.4 billion of the $16 billion worth of products the United States imported from there in 2023, but that’s just a tiny share of overall crude imports. Colombia accounted for more than a third of the total nursery stock imports and about 20 percent of coffee imports, according to the Census Bureau.

Although the U.S. economy is a vastly bigger market than Colombia’s, it would feel some pain in a trade war. U.S. makers of petroleum products, for instance, did about $2.5 billion in business with Colombia in 2023. The next most valuable annual exports to the country were corn ($1.2 billion) and chemicals ($1 billion).

Conor Dougherty covers housing and development, focusing on the rising costs of homeownership. He is based in Los Angeles. More about Conor Dougherty

See more on: U.S. Politics, Donald Trump
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