Today, Americans consume twice as much fruit, and three times as many vegetables, from both Mexico and Canada as we did two decades ago.. A parade of greenhouse tomatoes, peppers and cucumbers now come down, often by truck, from Canada. From Mexico, we've seen huge increases in imports of seasonal fruit. Mexican berries are an obvious example, but 20% of the imported watermelon we consumed in 2010-2012 also came from Mexico, compared with 5% in 1991-1993. As for imported avocados, 49% now come from Mexico, up from zero in 1991- 1993. Lots more tomatoes and papaya are coming from south of the border, too.... While Mexico is now the largest market for American apples and pears, U.S. meat exports to Mexico have doubled in the last two decades. Our exports of feed corn for livestock also now account for nearly one-third of the country's supply - meaning that even when Mexicans eat domestic meat, it's often been fed on American corn. -McMillan, Tracie. "How NAFTA Changed American (And Mexican) Food Forever." National Public Radio (NPR), February 13, 2015.
Today, Americans consume twice as much fruit, and three times as many vegetables, from both Mexico and Canada as we did two decades ago.. A parade of greenhouse tomatoes, peppers and cucumbers now come down, often by truck, from Canada. From Mexico, we've seen huge increases in imports of seasonal fruit. Mexican berries are an obvious example, but 20% of the imported watermelon we consumed in 2010-2012 also came from Mexico, compared with 5% in 1991-1993. As for imported avocados, 49% now come from Mexico, up from zero in 1991- 1993. Lots more tomatoes and papaya are coming from south of the border, too.... While Mexico is now the largest market for American apples and pears, U.S. meat exports to Mexico have doubled in the last two decades. Our exports of feed corn for livestock also now account for nearly one-third of the country's supply - meaning that even when Mexicans eat domestic meat, it's often been fed on American corn. -McMillan, Tracie. "How NAFTA Changed American (And Mexican) Food Forever." National Public Radio (NPR), February 13, 2015.
Chapter4: The Aggregate Economy
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 4E
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Who wrote this document and when?
![Today, Americans consume twice as much fruit, and three times as many vegetables, from both Mexico and Canada as we
did two decades ago... A parade of greenhouse tomatoes, peppers and cucumbers now come down, often by truck, from
Canada. From Mexico, we've seen huge increases in imports of seasonal fruit.
Mexican berries are an obvious example, but 20% of the imported watermelon we consumed in 2010-2012 also came from
Mexico, compared with 5% in 1991-1993. As for imported avocados, 49% now come from Mexico, up from zero in 1991-
1993. Lots more tomatoes and papaya are coming from south of the border, too....
While Mexico is now the largest market for American apples and pears, U.S. meat exports to Mexico have doubled in the
last two decades. Our exports of feed corn for livestock also now account for nearly one-third of the country's supply -
meaning that even when Mexicans eat domestic meat, it's often been fed on American corn.
-McMillan, Tracie. “How NAFTA Changed American (And Mexican) Food Forever." National Public Radio (NPR),
February 13, 2015.](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2F6f05f3b2-a3c9-470f-a260-397d01ee20e0%2F2940ce5f-c6d4-4a82-9578-90dcdf6350fb%2Fmt6bv04_processed.jpeg&w=3840&q=75)
Transcribed Image Text:Today, Americans consume twice as much fruit, and three times as many vegetables, from both Mexico and Canada as we
did two decades ago... A parade of greenhouse tomatoes, peppers and cucumbers now come down, often by truck, from
Canada. From Mexico, we've seen huge increases in imports of seasonal fruit.
Mexican berries are an obvious example, but 20% of the imported watermelon we consumed in 2010-2012 also came from
Mexico, compared with 5% in 1991-1993. As for imported avocados, 49% now come from Mexico, up from zero in 1991-
1993. Lots more tomatoes and papaya are coming from south of the border, too....
While Mexico is now the largest market for American apples and pears, U.S. meat exports to Mexico have doubled in the
last two decades. Our exports of feed corn for livestock also now account for nearly one-third of the country's supply -
meaning that even when Mexicans eat domestic meat, it's often been fed on American corn.
-McMillan, Tracie. “How NAFTA Changed American (And Mexican) Food Forever." National Public Radio (NPR),
February 13, 2015.
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