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Argentina Drops Export Taxes On Aluminum And Steel-And What's Really Driving It
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Argentina has suspended export duties on a defined list of aluminum, steel, and related products shipped to countries that currently charge import tariffs of 45% or more on those goods.
The change takes effect on Thursday and runs through December 31, 2025, or sooner if those destination tariffs fall below the 45% threshold. The measure was published in the Official Gazette and sets the export duty at 0% for qualifying shipments.
On the surface, this is a tax tweak. Behind it is a bigger story about how metalmakers in mid-sized economies are trying to survive a wave of trade barriers abroad.
Argentine producers say they have been priced out of key markets by steep import charges that make their products less competitive the moment they cross a border.
By removing Argentina's own export duty-but only for sales into highly protected markets -the government is trying to claw back a few percentage points of price room so exporters can keep contracts alive and furnaces running.
How it works is simple: if the destination country's import tariff on the listed aluminum or steel products is 45% or higher, the Argentine export duty drops to zero.
Tariff Suspension Shifts Trade Dynamics
If that country later reduces its tariff below 45%, the suspension stops applying for that route. The Production Coordination Secretariat will inform customs which destinations qualify and update the list as rules change.
Why this matters beyond Argentina : metals are foundational to construction, autos, machinery, packaging, and energy projects. When trade barriers go up, costs ripple through supply chains worldwide.
This policy won't erase foreign tariffs, but it does remove a domestic cost that often decides whether a shipment sails or sits. Expect tighter bidding, faster deal-making, and some rerouting of cargoes over the next few months.
What to watch next: which countries end up on the qualifying list; whether major markets tighten or loosen their import measures; and whether Buenos Aires extends, narrows, or lets the suspension expire at year-end.
For buyers and sellers, the new rule is a practical variable to factor into prices, delivery windows, and contract terms now.
The change takes effect on Thursday and runs through December 31, 2025, or sooner if those destination tariffs fall below the 45% threshold. The measure was published in the Official Gazette and sets the export duty at 0% for qualifying shipments.
On the surface, this is a tax tweak. Behind it is a bigger story about how metalmakers in mid-sized economies are trying to survive a wave of trade barriers abroad.
Argentine producers say they have been priced out of key markets by steep import charges that make their products less competitive the moment they cross a border.
By removing Argentina's own export duty-but only for sales into highly protected markets -the government is trying to claw back a few percentage points of price room so exporters can keep contracts alive and furnaces running.
How it works is simple: if the destination country's import tariff on the listed aluminum or steel products is 45% or higher, the Argentine export duty drops to zero.
Tariff Suspension Shifts Trade Dynamics
If that country later reduces its tariff below 45%, the suspension stops applying for that route. The Production Coordination Secretariat will inform customs which destinations qualify and update the list as rules change.
Why this matters beyond Argentina : metals are foundational to construction, autos, machinery, packaging, and energy projects. When trade barriers go up, costs ripple through supply chains worldwide.
This policy won't erase foreign tariffs, but it does remove a domestic cost that often decides whether a shipment sails or sits. Expect tighter bidding, faster deal-making, and some rerouting of cargoes over the next few months.
What to watch next: which countries end up on the qualifying list; whether major markets tighten or loosen their import measures; and whether Buenos Aires extends, narrows, or lets the suspension expire at year-end.
For buyers and sellers, the new rule is a practical variable to factor into prices, delivery windows, and contract terms now.

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