
Why MAGA Wants to Make Mexican Coke in the US
This new Coke is highly unlikely to Make America Healthy Again. But it raises the question of how US soda manufacturers came to rely so heavily on the corn-based sweetener in the first place. The answer is protectionism, one of the main items on the Make America Great Again agenda. As it turns out, when you combine MAHA and MAGA, what you get is … Mexican Coke.
Because sugar-based Coca-Cola is already available in the US — it's just imported from Mexico and known colloquially as 'Mexican Coke.' The company does that because the US has extensive trade protections for American sugar growers, which pushes the domestic price of sugar in the US far above the world level. That means that it makes more economic sense to use corn-based sweeteners in US-based soda production while importing sugar soda from Mexico.
Kennedy believes the ubiquity of high fructose corn syrup in the American diet has a significant deleterious impact on Americans' health. My more informed colleagues can adjudicate that claim, which I doubt. My concern is the distortionary impact of America's sugar policy on global trade flows and the allocation of natural resources.
Turning corn into sugar is an inefficient process compared to turning sugar cane into sugar, so using HFCS is significantly more land-intensive than using regular sugar. Blocking sugar cane to promote HFCS therefore promotes global deforestation, on the margin, and raises the domestic price of food and land for Americans. In the grand scheme of things these are minor impacts — meat and especially cattle have by far the biggest land impacts of any economic sector — but they're something.
The cornerstone of US sugar policy is a system of tariff rate quotas. Under the so-called TRQ system, a limited amount of sugar can be imported to the US and lightly taxed. These quotas are set on both a national basis and for dozens of sugar-producing countries. Any sugar above the quota level is taxed at a rate of at least 15 cents per pound — and with the global price of sugar at only about 16 cents per pound, that's a huge tax.
These TRQs, meanwhile, are only one part of a larger plan whose objective is to prevent domestic sugar prices from getting too low while providing guaranteed profits to domestic sugar farmers. Another aspect of it, for example, is the US Department of Agriculture's practice of giving guaranteed discounted loans to sugar producers, with sugar itself offered up as collateral. The USDA is then instructed to manage an Overall Allotment Quantity (OAQ) — basically a national sugar production target — designed to ensure that the collateral is good for the loans and avoid credit losses.
The upshot of all this is a windfall for a tiny number of American sugar farmers; a modest boost for America's corn farmers; higher prices for American consumers; and economic losses for America's trading partners in Latin America.
This set of policies dates to the 1980s and has nothing in particular to do with President Donald Trump. But it amounts to a real-world road test of some MAGAnomics principles, and underscores how self-defeating protectionism can be. It's not just that American sugar policy raises costs and thus lowers living standards for the majority of people. It's that it undermines US manufacturing, because sugar is used as an input for other processes.
Yes, in a naive sense, blocking sugar imports would seem to improve the US balance of trade. But the actual impact is unknowable. If tropical sugar-producing countries were allowed to export more sugar, they would have higher incomes. Those incomes would be spent on things, likely including the kinds of things that the US exports — airplanes, turbines, medical devices, beef, and whatever else. There would be real losses for some Americans, specifically the ones who own sugar plantations, but it's fundamentally a negative sum bargain that hurts most people on both sides of the trading relationship.
Meanwhile, bad as all this sugar protectionism is as overall economic policy, the relationship to public health is borderline nonexistent.
Coke simply manufacturing a cane sugar soda to give Trump a propaganda win, for starters, isn't going to change consumer behavior. Sodas sweetened with cane sugar are already widely available in the US, not only from competing brands but from Coca-Cola itself. They are less popular because they are more expensive.
Even if consumers did switch, there is no real evidence that cane sugar is healthier than HFCS. Mexico, for example, where non-HFCS sodas are mainstream, has recently surpassed the US in its obesity rate. The reason HFCS is bad for you is not that it's worse for you than cane sugar — it's that the development of HFCS technology has made it cheaper to add sweetener to all kinds of things. And while most people like the sweet stuff, all this sweetened hyper-palatable food and drink encourages overconsumption.
A serious conversation about what, if anything, to do about this would be welcome. But it solves nothing to pile scientifically illiterate policies onto economically illiterate ones.
Elsewhere in Bloomberg Opinion:
For more, subscribe to our newsletter.
This column reflects the personal views of the author and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.
Matthew Yglesias is a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion. A co-founder of and former columnist for Vox, he writes the Slow Boring blog and newsletter. He is author of 'One Billion Americans.'
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com/opinion
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
a minute ago
- Business Standard
Nayara Energy sues Microsoft over EU sanctions-linked service suspension
Nayara Energy Ltd, owned by Russian energy major Rosneft, has moved the Delhi High Court against American tech giant Microsoft Corp., alleging that the company unilaterally suspended critical digital services citing European Union (EU) sanctions — despite Nayara holding fully paid-up licences and not being subject to such restrictions under Indian or US law. In its petition, Nayara — which operates India's largest single-location refinery in Vadinar, Gujarat — is seeking an interim injunction and restoration of services, arguing that Microsoft's move jeopardises its access to proprietary tools, data, and infrastructure essential to its operations. Microsoft declined to comment. In a statement, Nayara said that while the sanctions originate exclusively from the EU, Microsoft — a US-headquartered corporation — has chosen to withdraw services from Nayara Energy without any legal requirement to do so under US or Indian law. 'This action has been taken unilaterally, without prior notice, consultation or recourse, and under the guise of compliance. Such moves signal a worrying trend of global corporations extending foreign legal frameworks into jurisdictions where they have no applicability,' the statement said. 'Despite these external challenges that Nayara Energy is currently facing, we remain fully committed to ensuring uninterrupted service and supply to India's energy demands,' the company said, adding that Nayara's mission, 'In India, for India,' drives its operations. Nayara primarily caters to the domestic market through India's largest private fuel retail network, institutional sales, and partnerships with other oil marketing companies (OMCs). The company is also investing in petrochemicals and clean energy, creating thousands of direct and indirect employment opportunities across India. 'All of Nayara Energy's operations are fully compliant with Indian laws and regulations, and the company remains in regular engagement with Indian authorities to ensure transparency and accountability,' it said. The company reiterated that Microsoft's action was taken without prior notice, consultation, or legal mandate, and labelled the move a case of corporate overreach.


India Today
26 minutes ago
- India Today
Your chest shrinks to 36 inches when you face Trump: Trinamool MP's swipe at PM
Trinamool Congress (TMC) MP Kalyan Banerjee on Monday taunted Prime Minister Narendra Modi over US President Donald Trump's repeated claims of brokering a ceasefire between India and Pakistan during Operation Sindoor. Speaking on Operation Sindoor in the House, TMC MP Kalyan Banerjee said, "PM Modi, why once you couldn't post on your 'X' handle that whatever the American President said is incorrect... The moment you stand in front of the American President, your height is reduced to 5 feet, and your chest is reduced to 36 inches from 56 inches. Why are you so afraid of the American President?'


NDTV
an hour ago
- NDTV
"No PM-Trump Call In April 22-June 17": S Jaishankar On Trump Claims
New Delhi: External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar has squashed any speculation US President Donald Trump played a role in negotiating an India-Pakistan ceasefire to end Operation Sindoor. "There was no call between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Trump between April 22 (the Pahalgam terror attack) and June 17 (the date the ceasefire was announced)," Mr Jaishankar said Monday evening during a volatile Parliament discussion on Pahalgam and Op Sindoor. The remarks follow repeated Mr Trump claiming he coaxed Delhi and Islamabad into stopping a conflict that escalated after missile strikes on terrorist bases in Pak and Pak-occupied Kashmir. India has firmly, and repeatedly, shot down Trump's claims, and also rebuffed his offer to 'mediate' a settlement to Pakistan's continued illegal occupation of Jammu and Kashmir. In fact, Prime Minister Modi himself delivered this message in a phone call with the American leader in mid-June. India has also dismissed Trump's heavy-handed linking of the India-US trade deal and the ceasefire; the US leader, during one of his credit grabs, said he told Mr Modi and Pak officials ' fellas, let's not trade nuclear missiles... let's trade the things you make so beautifully'. He also claimed to have " sure as hell helped settle the India-Pak problem". Mr Jaishankar's remarks today echo those he made on July 1, when he revealed he was with Mr Modi when US Vice President JD Vance spoke to him on the phone. Then too there had been no talk linking trade and ceasefire as far as India was concerned, the Foreign Minister said. On July 1 Mr Jaishankar told an American publication that Mr Modi spoke to Mr Vance on the night of May 9 to warn him of "a very massive assault on India" by Pakistan. The next contact, he said, was shortly before Pakistan's military called to ask for peace. Mr Jaishankar said that US Secretary of State Marco Rubio told him 'the Pakistanis are ready to talk'. And, hours later, Pak's Director-General of Military Operations reached out to India. The emphatic delinking of US and the India-Pak ceasefire is in response to repeated jabs by the opposition, mainly the Congress, which had criticised the government for allowing a foreign power to dictate foreign policy, and said India's diplomatic power had been "shattered". Meanwhile, during his speech - interrupted by the opposition on more than one occasion, which provoked Home Minister Amit Shah to rise to his colleague's defence - Mr Jaishankar said India would not tolerate terrorist activity on its soil and reserves the right to defend its citizens. "It was important to send a strong and resolute message after Pahalgam... a red line was crossed, and we had to make it clear there will be serious consequences," he said, outlining the steps taken by the government, beginning with diplomatic censures and the suspension of the critical 1960 Indus Waters Treaty, which irrigates over half of Pakistan's farms.