Mexican berry exports struggle with pandemic
The coronavirus has made its way across the world, and during the process causing uncertainty in Mexico’s economy and possible indications of a significant rise in unemployment. Quadratin,...
The coronavirus has made its way across the world, and during the process causing uncertainty in Mexico’s economy and possible indications of a significant rise in unemployment.
Quadratin, a Mexican news agency, reports that in the state of Jalisco, which is one of the main berry producers, hundreds of workers have been dismissed as a result of the economic recession. Day laborers in the southern area of Jalisco are one of the hardest hit sectors, including workers within the cultivation of berries.
In the 27 municipalities where berries are produced, a majority of the 70,000 farm workers have been affected, since most of the berries are exported to the United States and Canada in addition to other destinations such as Japan, Singapore, and the United Arab Emirates, which are all seeing lower demand because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
El Heraldo de Mexico, a Mexican news agency, reports that since many products are not able to be exported, many berries (fresh, dried, and processed) have been diverted to local markets to avoid further losses.

In an interview with El Heraldo de Mexico, the mayor of Sayula, Daniel Carrion, said, “Entrepreneurs are worried because the agricultural production cannot be stopped. They are warning that there will be economic losses in the harvest of berries, raspberries, blueberries, and blackberries. All of their product is for export. Shipments have stopped or dwindled because all of the destination countries are experiencing a similar situation or worse. There will be economic losses, workers fear massive layoffs. Yes, there is a catastrophic economic scenario for the municipality.”
The berry production generates about 70,000 direct jobs in the municipality of Sayula, Jalisco.
“Farm workers may be the most vulnerable,” Carrion said. “We have many day laborers who in some way expose themselves to contact with other people who are a risk factor.”
Image sources are either licensed or customer-provided.
Marco Campos is Media Coordinator, Latin America for Blue Book Services
News you need.
Join Blue Book today!
Get access to all the news and analysis you need to make the right decision --- delivered to your inbox.
What to read next
Produce industry headlines: April 20, 2026
Read about how berries are having their moment on spring menus, how to appear in Best in Blue Book, packaging trends, and more.
Oishii introduces new formats, pricing, and packaging for its berries
Oishii announced the introduction of new formats, price points, and packaging for its signature, non-GMO, pesticide-free berries.
Produce industry headlines: March 18, 2026
Aldi plans to rebrand Florida Winn-Dixie stores, Redner's upgrades digital tools, a new U.S.-Ecuador trade deal, crop updates, and more.
Produce industry headlines: February 27, 2026
Read about origin labeling, merchandising strategy shifts, discount expansion, transparency trends, and overall strong citrus demand.
Produce industry headlines: February 26, 2026
Read about how two grocers are using AI at store-level, HEB expands its discount banner, Tops remodels continue, and more.
Produce industry headlines: February 25, 2026
Find links to NielsenIQ grocery spending data, analysis of Sprouts struggles, Q&A with Save Mart's CEO, Chile's tariff concerns, and more.
Subscribe to our newsletter
© 2026 Blue Book Services. All Rights Reserved
