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Here’s what your guacamole — and other groceries — would cost if we had a Mexico border tax
Star Telegram ^ | ELIZABETH KOH

Posted on 01/28/2017 8:37:37 PM PST by SJackson

It was a claim that President Donald Trump repeated on the campaign trail: that he would build a wall and that the Mexicans would pay for it. In his first few days in office, Trump appeared to make good on one portion of that promise, by signing an executive order for the planning and building of that wall to proceed.

But the cost for that wall will temporarily be borne by Americans, Trump said, and Mexico’s government insists it will not pay for the construction on the border. On Thursday, President Donald Trump floated a 20 percent tax on imports from Mexico which suggested that until Trump’s promised reimbursement from the Mexicans materializes, Americans would pay for the border wall with their pocketbooks.

The White House clarified afterwards that Trump’s suggestion was an option rather than an official proposal, but social media users quickly questioned the possible uptick in one particular grocery item: avocados, of which 80 percent come from

America’s southern neighbor. Though the price of the guacamole’s main ingredient varies from market to market, the creamy green fruit usually costs a few dollars. Assuming a $3 cost, a 20 percent tax would increase the price to $3.60.

Takis, a common packaged food snack, would go from $6 to $7.20, the Washington Post reported. Other staples like tomato paste would also see only a slight markup, from about $1.20 to $1.44.

(Excerpt) Read more at star-telegram.com ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: border; guacamole; imports; importtax; strawberries; trump; usnbandit; wall
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To: SJackson

Isn’t guacamole a mexican dish?
Chips are easy to make at home.
What grain, fruit or vegetable cannot be grown in America?
I can’t think of one.


61 posted on 01/28/2017 9:11:03 PM PST by 1_Rain_Drop
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To: joshua c
If the price of guacamole goes up, Trump is finished for sure.

I saw a Presidential tracking poll during the Bush administration that found a 100% correlation between Bush's favorability on the economy and the price of guacamole. Or was it gasoline...

62 posted on 01/28/2017 9:12:48 PM PST by FredZarguna (And what Rough Beast, its hour come 'round at last, slouches toward Fifth Avenue to be born?)
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To: 1_Rain_Drop

“What grain, fruit or vegetable cannot be grown in America?
I can’t think of one.”

Bananas, but they don’t come from Mexico anyway. I’ve got a banana tree growing in my greenhouse, anxious to see how it does.


63 posted on 01/28/2017 9:13:33 PM PST by Duchess47 ("One day I will leave this world and dream myself to Reality" Crazy Horse)
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>> Star Telegram, ELIZABETH KOH

Women...

I’ll accept a 10% grocery increase if it saves me 60% on the related economic costs of incubating illegal inhabitants.


64 posted on 01/28/2017 9:14:38 PM PST by Gene Eric (Don't be a statist!)
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To: Cowgirl of Justice
tax on something brought here to feed the immigrants

So the redoubtable WaPo can have its cake and eat it, too:

Headline #1: Tax on Mexican Vegetables to be Born by Americans in Grocery Stores...
Headline #2: ... Illegals to be Hardest Hit.

65 posted on 01/28/2017 9:16:27 PM PST by FredZarguna (And what Rough Beast, its hour come 'round at last, slouches toward Fifth Avenue to be born?)
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To: SJackson

A tax on imported goods is a tax on US taxpayers. I would rather see a heavy tax on remittances to Mexico. That is money taken out of our economy, much of it through illegal labor, and put into the Mexican economy.


66 posted on 01/28/2017 9:17:21 PM PST by USNBandit (Sarcasm engaged at all times)
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To: FlingWingFlyer

There’s a huge tomato processing plant just 20 minutes from my house here in central Hoosierland.

Red Gold.

Excellent salsa and catsup and other canned ‘mater products.


67 posted on 01/28/2017 9:18:28 PM PST by digger48
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To: SJackson

Will this affect Taco Bell?

Didn’t think so.


68 posted on 01/28/2017 9:18:35 PM PST by ROCKLOBSTER (The fear of stark justice sends hot urine down their thighs.)
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To: Palio di Siena

A 10% decline in the peso vs. the dollar cuts a 20% tax effectively to 18%. Which is not “half.”


69 posted on 01/28/2017 9:19:00 PM PST by FredZarguna (And what Rough Beast, its hour come 'round at last, slouches toward Fifth Avenue to be born?)
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To: USNBandit

This is what I don’t understand. What is it that Mexico produces that we so desperately need?


70 posted on 01/28/2017 9:20:31 PM PST by Duchess47 ("One day I will leave this world and dream myself to Reality" Crazy Horse)
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To: bigbob

Negra Modelo’s tambien!


71 posted on 01/28/2017 9:20:55 PM PST by TauntedTiger (Political correctness analyst/expert/victim)
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To: USNBandit

I would rather see a heavy tax on remittances to Mexico.


Good luck getting that through Congress. Not going to happen.


72 posted on 01/28/2017 9:23:27 PM PST by lodi90
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To: SJackson
Reporterettes should not be allowed to play with sharp objects or statistics.

A tariff is not a tax at retail, but wholesale. Fruit and veggies have huge mark-ups. It's more likely the item cost $1 wholesale, which means the cost goes up .20.

73 posted on 01/28/2017 9:23:54 PM PST by gogeo (But he's not a conserrrrrvative!)
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To: SJackson

We only get organic fruits and vegetables produced in America..Mexico can keep their crap there is nothing from them that I want


74 posted on 01/28/2017 9:23:59 PM PST by Sarah Barracuda
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To: SJackson

Mexican food is vile anyway. - always looks post-digested or regurgitated.


75 posted on 01/28/2017 9:24:04 PM PST by Zirondelle ("disce aut discede")
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To: Duchess47

Stoop labor and cool soap operas apparently.


76 posted on 01/28/2017 9:24:13 PM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: Duchess47

A fair amount of produce


77 posted on 01/28/2017 9:24:41 PM PST by USNBandit (Sarcasm engaged at all times)
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To: Davy Crocket
I try to not eat anything from Mexico.

I also try not to eat anything from Mexico, considering the filthy personal hygiene of the agricultural workers. And the fact that they use human waste for fertilizer. However, virtually all blackberries I'm seeing in markets now come from Mexico. Don't know why. Commercially made guacamole also seems to be made exclusively in Mexico. Why can't we make it here?

78 posted on 01/28/2017 9:24:57 PM PST by EinNYC
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To: SJackson
guacamole

Guacamole SUCKS!

Now Guasacaca! That's some good eatin'.

79 posted on 01/28/2017 9:25:18 PM PST by ROCKLOBSTER (The fear of stark justice sends hot urine down their thighs.)
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To: Yaelle

Not everywhere in California.

Morro Valley (along State Highway 41 near the coast, and near to Morro Bay) has the Northernmost orchards of any size ---that I know of.

There could more, possibly some avocados as far North as Carmel Valley, a little around Salinas possibly(?) on the seaward lands, and maybe in a few micro-climate pockets here and there North to Sonoma County (at best) but past Carmel Valley would be increasingly dicey, wherever the trees could be subject to frost. Morro Valley (further south than those places just listed) gets periodic frosts. I have acquaintances there who own avocado orchards.

Down South (California) the best orchards were near to and inland of San Diego. Ventura-Santa Barbara coast had (likely still has) more than a few sizable orchards...and I think the valley that runs from Oxnard over to I-5 has avocados.

Central Valley? Forget it. There may not be frost every year, but often enough that one would have to be cutting back to stumps far too often. Most of the San Joaquin-- similar problem, though not as acute.

Texas has too much frost. What's left? Florida? I don't think they grow much of the Hass variety (I could be wrong, and who knows? maybe that could change? -- but I seem to recall encountering online discussion of this issue among Florida growers with the consensus seeming to be that those who were already growing the Florida varietals would continue with what was working in their own locale, already -- meaning-- nobody much was moving towards growing Hass and varieties more similar to Hass than to the Florida types).

80 posted on 01/28/2017 9:25:46 PM PST by BlueDragon (on a 10 dollar horse and a 40 dollar saddle I'm goin' up the trail with them longhorn cattle)
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