The Argentine government signed a reciprocal trade and investment agreement with the United States, seen as a first step toward a potential free trade deal. Signed in Washington, the measure will eliminate tariffs on thousands of products and expand the beef export quota to 100,000 tons annually. Officials hailed the deal as a boost to the country's international integration.
On February 6, 2026, Argentine Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer signed the Reciprocal Trade and Investment Agreement between Argentina and the United States in Washington. Presented as a strategic framework to deepen bilateral ties, the deal eliminates U.S. tariffs on 1,675 Argentine products, potentially generating additional exports worth $1.013 billion, plus $800 million from the beef sector.
The following day, President Donald Trump signed an executive decree raising the annual quota for Argentine beef imports from 20,000 to 100,000 tons, targeting lean trimmings for ground beef. Justified by the U.S. cattle crisis from droughts, fires, and pests that cut the herd to 94.2 million heads in July 2025, the increase will roll out in four quarterly tranches of 20,000 tons each. Foreign Minister Quirno called the agreement 'the first step that will lead us to discussions for a Free Trade Agreement in the future, which will ratify and deepen this deal'.
The government plans to submit the text to the Argentine Congress in March for ratification during ordinary sessions, though it will implement some chapters administratively for quick results. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Argentina (AmCham) praised the pact, noting it aligns Argentine regulations with international standards in trade, investments, intellectual property, and digital economy, fostering predictability and legal security to attract investments. Affected sectors include agroindustry (meats, dairy, wines), automotive, energy (lithium, copper), pharmaceuticals, and digital services.
Critics, such as analyst Alejandro Olmos Gaona, view it as a 'surrender' abandoning Argentina's tradition of diplomatic autonomy, referencing historical precedents like the Drago Doctrine and Roque Sáenz Peña's stances. Cabinet Chief Manuel Adorni quipped: 'We went from signing a pact with Iran to signing a deal with the world's leading power'. Following the announcement, Argentine bonds and stocks rebounded, with country risk at 512 basis points.
The agreement positions Argentina as the first in the region to sign such an instrument with Washington, aligning geopolitically under Western principles.