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						Flooding woes add to trade war stress in 'Trump country' 
						farm belt
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		 [March 26, 2019]   
		By Humeyra Pamuk and P.J. Huffstutter 
 COLUMBUS, Neb./CHICAGO (Reuters) - Nebraska 
		grain farmer Ryan Ueberrhein was barely breaking even after the 
		U.S.-China trade war pushed prices for his soybean crop to a decade low. 
		Then the nearby Elkhorn River burst its banks as flooding swept across 
		the U.S. farm belt.
 
 Uberrhein's farm was left covered in debris after the roiling water 
		receded. He has mounting debts. And he is worried that President Donald 
		Trump may not be able to strike a trade deal with China that would end 
		tariffs on U.S. soybean exports - and allow him to sell whatever grain 
		is left intact at a better price.
 
 Frustration is building across farm country at what feels like a 
		never-ending season of bad news.
 
 The trade war "keeps damaging us," said Ueberrhein, 34, of Valley, 
		Nebraska, who voted for Trump. "What the president is doing, we stand by 
		him, but ... we can’t keep getting hit just because a deal can't be made 
		quickly."
 
 U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary 
		Steven Mnuchin are set to arrive in China this week for another round of 
		trade talks with their Chinese counterparts. The two sides have yet to 
		agree on many core issues.
 
		
		 
		
 Farmers who spoke to Reuters remained supportive of Trump.
 
 Soybean exports to China hit a four-year low in February because of the 
		trade war. China is the biggest buyer of U.S. soybeans, which are the 
		largest single U.S. agricultural export. A near halt in exports has hit 
		a rural economy already struggling after years of oversupply cut farm 
		incomes by 50 percent in the past five years.
 
 Debt in the agrarian economy has hit levels last seen during the U.S. 
		farm collapse of the 1980s. (Graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/2TkUDjk)
 
 The Nebraska Rural Response Hotline, which provides support to farmers 
		and ranchers, has received a record number of calls about financial 
		distress, said John Hansen, president of the Nebraska Farmers Union. 
		Calls about suicide and depression were up, too, he said.
 
 The latest piece of bad news came on March 11, when the Trump 
		administration released its 2020 budget and proposed a 15 percent cut 
		for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, calling its subsidies to farmers 
		"overly generous."
 
 It did not matter to farmers, who helped vote Trump into office, that 
		the budget will not pass muster with Democrats who control the House of 
		Representatives, Hansen said. Some farmers took the proposed cut to 
		subsidies for crop insurance as an insult.
 
 "How many times do you have to kick us when we're down?" he said.
 
 That insurance is crucial to Richard Oswald, who farms near Phelps City, 
		Missouri. The flood has already swallowed his childhood home, many of 
		his fields and more than 20,000 bushels of corn. His four grain bins 
		have burst, after water-logged corn expanded and split open.
 
		 
		
 "If our government and leaders can't step up and start to lead, we're 
		done for," he said.
 
 For years, Oswald paid extra for flood insurance. He hoped that 
		government talk of investing in improving U.S. infrastructure would come 
		through - and bolster the levees and dams throughout the Midwest.
 
		
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			A grain elevator is pictured after heavy floods severely damaged 
			farmland in North Bend, Nebraska, U.S., March 22, 2019. Picture 
			taken on March 22, 2019. REUTERS/Humeyra Pamuk 
            
			 
But this year, as the trade war dragged on, he dropped the policy to reduce 
expenses. So he will get no insurance money for the lost corn, Oswald said.
 A few days ago, one of his lenders called. Oswald didn't have to pay the loan 
right away, the lender said, but he would have to repay it sooner or later.
 
 "Help needs to come from Congress, but Congress is so divided, I don't know 
what's going to happen," Oswald said.
 
DISASTER DECLARATION
 Trump approved a disaster declaration for Nebraska on Thursday, making federal 
funding available in nine counties that bore the brunt of the recent floods. On 
Saturday, he approved one for flood-affected counties in Iowa.
 
 Greg Ibach, a USDA under secretary, is touring the damage in Nebraska, and Bill 
Northey, another under secretary, will head to Iowa, agency officials told 
Reuters.
 
 U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa said the farm belt states would need more 
aid, suggesting a separate relief bill to offer compensation to farmers for 
livestock killed in the floods and grains in storage that will have to be 
destroyed.
 
"The United States government has always been the insurance of last resort," 
Grassley said in a phone interview on Friday.
 Nebraska Governor Pete Ricketts put agricultural flood damage for the state at 
nearly $1 billion. Iowa officials are projecting losses of at least $1.6 
billion, with at least $214 million in damage to the agriculture sector. Iowa 
Governor Kim Reynolds said her state would need assistance beyond what is 
granted through disaster declarations.
 
 
 
Farmers, meanwhile, are staring at waterlogged fields and expecting more floods. 
The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said last week that the 
flooding would worsen in coming weeks as snow on the ground melts and water 
flows downstream.
 
 Iowa farmer Dave Newby said the standing water in his fields was already 
threatening his planned start to corn in mid-to-late April. Newby, like many 
farmers, had been looking to boost his corn plantings this year because such a 
large volume of soybeans had been left unsold because of the trade war.
 
 The same was the case in nearby Nebraska. Parts of flooded farmland remained 
under water and farmers had yet to assess the damage the piled-up sand, silt and 
debris caused to soil. Almost all said planting will likely be delayed, which 
could lead to lower yields.
 
 "Normal planting would take place around May 1, but I doubt we will make it," 
said Kendal Sock, a cattle and corn farmer in Genoa. "I wish they’d get this 
trade deal done, like now."
 
 (Reporting by Humeyra Pamuk and P.J. Huffstutter; Additional reporting by Mark 
Weinraub and Tom Polansek in Chicago and Jarrett Renshaw in New York; Editing by 
Caroline Stauffer, David Gaffen, Simon Webb and Leslie Adler)
 
				 
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