Trump tariffs threaten 35 000 SA jobs, farmer's group warns
The new 30% tariffs set to be imposed on South Africa by the Trump administration will threaten 35 000 jobs in the country’s citrus-growing sector and the economies of entire towns, a farmers group said Tuesday.
The Citrus Growers’ Association of Southern Africa said the impending reciprocal tariffs, due to come into effect on Wednesday, will be deeply damaging to South Africa’s largest agricultural export.
The group said the tariffs would likely make South African citrus fruits cost US$4.25 more per carton for American consumers. South Africa provides citrus to the US market when it is out of season there.
South Africa is the second-biggest exporter of oranges behind Spain and the world’s fourth-largest exporter of soft citrus fruits, according to the World Citrus Organisation.
South Africa sends around 5%-6% of its citrus exports to the United States, which is more than 6.5 million cartons per year, the growers’ association said, but some rural towns were specifically geared to and heavily dependent on the US market.
Huge losses expected
The farmers’ group cited the case of the town of Citrusdal, near Cape Town, and said it faced major job losses and “maybe even total economic collapse” because it was built on exporting citrus to the U.S. It said there were other rural towns like it.
“There is immense anxiety in our communities,” said Gerrit van der Merwe, the chairman of the Citrus Growers’ Association and a citrus farmer near Citrusdal.
The group said the tariffs were due to come into effect the same week the first citrus fruit of the South African season was being packed to be exported to the US.
It said it was urgently calling on the South African government to prioritise negotiations with the US on tariff reductions or exemptions on citrus.
The Citrus Growers’ Association of Southern Africa said the impending reciprocal tariffs, due to come into effect on Wednesday, will be deeply damaging to South Africa’s largest agricultural export.
The group said the tariffs would likely make South African citrus fruits cost US$4.25 more per carton for American consumers. South Africa provides citrus to the US market when it is out of season there.
South Africa is the second-biggest exporter of oranges behind Spain and the world’s fourth-largest exporter of soft citrus fruits, according to the World Citrus Organisation.
South Africa sends around 5%-6% of its citrus exports to the United States, which is more than 6.5 million cartons per year, the growers’ association said, but some rural towns were specifically geared to and heavily dependent on the US market.
Huge losses expected
The farmers’ group cited the case of the town of Citrusdal, near Cape Town, and said it faced major job losses and “maybe even total economic collapse” because it was built on exporting citrus to the U.S. It said there were other rural towns like it.
“There is immense anxiety in our communities,” said Gerrit van der Merwe, the chairman of the Citrus Growers’ Association and a citrus farmer near Citrusdal.
The group said the tariffs were due to come into effect the same week the first citrus fruit of the South African season was being packed to be exported to the US.
It said it was urgently calling on the South African government to prioritise negotiations with the US on tariff reductions or exemptions on citrus.
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