Mexico’s clearest new signal to textile and apparel supply chains arrived in December , when the Senate approved steep tariff hikes on imports from major Asian suppliers. The measure will raise or impose duties of up to ** per cent starting in **** on goods from countries without a free-trade deal (including China, India, South Korea, Thailand, and Indonesia), with textiles and clothing explicitly in scope. The majority of affected products are set to face tariffs of around ** per cent, with officials framing the move as a way to bolster local industry and jobs and to generate additional revenue.
This is not a minor duty tweak, but a broad-based tariff wall aimed at resetting Mexico’s default sourcing options. What makes this action more than just a headline is how it connects to a broader policy pattern. It is not a one-off swing, but rather the latest block in a growing ‘duty wall’ designed to make Mexico’s low-cost, non-FTA sourcing lanes, especially imports of Asia-origin textiles and finished apparel, more expensive and harder to exploit via simplified channels. In other words, Mexico is steadily erecting trade barriers to redirect sourcing away from the cheapest overseas routes and towards more traceable, preferential pathways.
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