Key Takeaways
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- The U.S. will eliminate tariffs on bananas, coffee, beef, and select textile/apparel items from Ecuador, Argentina, El Salvador, and Guatemala.
- The move marks a shift away from Trump’s signature “reciprocal tariffs” as consumer prices rise and legal uncertainty grows.
- Policy targets goods not produced domestically, aiming to ease inflation pressures quickly.
- Partner countries will reduce regulatory barriers for U.S. firms and coordinate with Washington on trade policies related to China.
- Full details of the agreements will be released in the coming weeks.
A Strategic Pullback From Hardline Tariffs - The U.S. plans to eliminate import tariffs on key consumer goods—including bananas, coffee, beef, and select apparel—from Ecuador, Argentina, El Salvador, and Guatemala, according to senior administration officials. The shift signals a recalibration of Trump-era tariff policy amid persistent inflation and mounting legal pressure.
- Targeting Goods America Doesn’t Produce
- The tariff reductions apply to items the U.S. does not manufacture domestically. The administration previewed the move in a September executive order, which authorized tariff reductions for select goods when partner countries agree to broader cooperation frameworks.
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the immediate priority is lowering consumer prices. “Coffee, bananas, other fruits—things like that. That will bring prices down very quickly,” he told Fox News.
- Bananas, Coffee, and Beef Highlight the List
- Joint statements released Thursday specify:
- Bananas and coffee from Ecuador
- Beef from Argentina
- Textiles and apparel from Guatemala and El Salvador
- The changes come as Trump signals openness to easing beef import restrictions to counter rising domestic meat prices. The administration clarified it is not planning federally coordinated beef shipments but will reduce tariffs “in the weeks ahead.”
- Trade Partners Reduce Barriers for U.S. Companies
- In exchange, Ecuador, Argentina, El Salvador, and Guatemala agreed to:
- Reduce licensing and regulatory hurdles for U.S. firms
- Strengthen cooperation with Washington on trade involving non-market economies, including China
- Maintain broader tariff levels—15% for Ecuador and 10% for the other three countries—on goods beyond the agreed list
- Inflation and Legal Backdrop Shaping Policy
- The changes come against legal uncertainty after a recent Supreme Court hearing on the administration’s tariff authority. With consumer prices elevated, the administration has shifted toward selectively unwinding tariffs in categories where relief is politically beneficial and economically low-risk.
- More details will be published soon, a senior official said.











