Business Opportunities in Agriculture: 150 Field Interviews (Book)

Mexico Agribusiness Report

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The Mexico Agribusiness Report features Business Monitor International's market assessment and independent 5-year forecasts covering the supply and demand outlook for the livestock, dairy, grains, rice, sugar, edible oils, coffee and cocoa sectors. ( Mexico Agribusiness Report - Business Market Reports )

Business Monitor International's Agribusiness service also provides proprietary medium term price forecasts for key commodities, including corn, wheat, rice, sugar, cocoa, coffee, soy and milk; in addition to newly-researched competitive intelligence on leading agribusiness producers, traders and suppliers; in-depth analysis of latest industry developments; and essential industry context, such as the background macroeconomic outlook and the downstream supply chain.

Key Benefits
Use BMI's independent 5-Year industry forecasts to test other views - a key input for successful planning in dynamic agribusiness markets.

Apply BMI's medium term commodity price forecasts to assist with budgetary planning and the identification of investment opportunities and potential risks

Exploit latest competitive intelligence on your competitors and peers in Asia, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East and Africa through our company rankings and analysis.

Executive Summary
With the final phasing out of tariffs and quotas on agricultural trade between Mexico and the US in January 2008, the Mexican agriculture industry will be open to competition from her giant northern neighbour. In BMI's new Mexico Agribusiness Report for Q1 2009, we examine how prepared the country is to deal with this challenge.

Restrictions on trade first started to be lifted back in 1994 and since then food imports have soared. However, the increased imports have not necessarily come at the expense of Mexican domestic production, which has also seen strong growth across a number of sectors. The real driver of the rise in imports has been the growth in Mexican demand for food products as per capita incomes have risen over the last decade or more.

Despite this, within a month of the final quotas being lifted on January 1 2008, farmers took to the streets of Mexico City, burning a tractor and corralling dairy cows outside the stock exchange to show their displeasure at the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Many Mexican farmers are worried that they will be unable to compete with US goods as farms north of the border tend to be far more efficient and so can produce more cheaply. Since its inception, NAFTA has been an easy scapegoat for many of the failings in Mexican agriculture.

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Business Opportunities in Agriculture: 150 Field Interviews (Book)

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