Trump administration announces $16 billion farm aid plan
to offset trade war losses
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[May 24, 2019]
By Humeyra Pamuk
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration on Thursday unveiled a $16 billion farm aid package to
offset losses from a 10-month trade war with China and said payment
rates to farmers would be determined by where they farm rather than what
crops they grow.
The package, the bulk of which will be spent on direct payments,
surprised growers and traders who had expected to learn separate payment
rates for soybeans, hogs, corn and other crops in the Department of
Agriculture (USDA) briefing.
Many farm groups welcomed the move, but called for a trade deal with
China as soon as possible. Some Democrats have slammed the plan, calling
it a 'band-aid' and said the county-based payment system could leave
some farmers with reduced aid.
Farmers, a key constituency that helped carry U.S. President Donald
Trump to his 2016 electoral win, have been among the hardest hit from a
trade dispute with China, once a destination for more than 60 percent of
U.S. soybean exports.
"The farmers have been attacked by China," Trump said in a press
conference about the aid package. "But the $16 billion of funds will ...
make clear that no country has veto on America's economic and national
security," he said.
The trade dispute, which escalated this month after Washington and
Beijing hiked tariffs on imports of each other's goods, has left U.S.
farmers sitting on record volumes of soybeans with China halting
purchases.
USDA officials said on Thursday they will roll out $14.5 billion in
direct payments in three separate tranches with the first one planned
for late July.
"The package we are announcing today ensures that farmers will not bear
the brunt of those trade practices by China or any other nations,"
Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue said. "While farmers would tell
you they’d rather have trade not aid, without the trade ... they're
going to need some support."
China, the world's top soybean importer, curbed purchases of U.S. soy
last year when Trump imposed tariffs on Chinese goods, prompting China
to retaliate with tariffs on U.S. soy, pork, corn and other products.
An imminent trade deal between Washington and Beijing seems unlikely as
the trade tensions between the world's top two economies rose after U.S.
placed China's Huawei Technologies on a trade blacklist last week,
triggering sharp protest from China.
Perdue also said the second and third tranches, with exact amounts yet
to be decided, will be dependant on the progress in the trade talks and
whether the U.S. will get a deal with China. The total package also
includes $1.4 billion of support through food purchases and $100 million
allocated to development of foreign markets.
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Justin Mensik, corn and soybean farmer, attends to his cattle at his
farm in Morse Bluff, Nebraska, U.S. March 22, 2019. REUTERS/Humeyra
Pamuk/File Photo
PLANTING DECISIONS
Perdue said the USDA has redesigned last year's aid program of up to $12 billion
based on feedback. The new package therefore will have a single payment rate per
county, calculated by the damages in that area, instead of a rate for every
commodity across the nation.
"Those per acre payments are not dependent on which of those crops are planted
in 2019, and therefore will not distort planting decisions," USDA said in a
statement.
Chicago Board of Trade corn futures turned lower and soybean futures extended
earlier losses after the announcement.
The county-based mechanism for the aid payments have triggered a heated debate
on whether it would impact planting decisions. Some analysts said the trade aid
package could encourage farmers to try to seed their crops in order to qualify
for the relief despite overly wet fields that have stalled planting this spring.
Jim Hefner, an Ohio farmer who has not been able to start planting due to heavy
rain, said the plan could cause him to alter his initial acreage plans, however.
"I guess we would make more of an effort to get something planted," Hefner said.
"We may forgo corn and plant soybeans."
Some farmers remain skeptical.
Dan Henebry, a corn and soybean farmer in Buffalo, Illinois, said the payments
are directed at rural areas that helped propel Trump into office. Henebry, who
voted for a third-party candidate in 2016, said he wants the president to end
the trade war with China.
"If we solve the issue, we wouldn't need this," he said about the aid package.
(Additional reporting by Jeff Mason and Susan Heavey and Tom Polansek, Mark
Weinraub, P.J. Huffstutter, Karl Plume in Chicago, Editing by Chizu Nomiyama,
Jeffrey Benkoe and Susan Thomas)
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