U.S. overpaid corn farmers $3 billion in Trump trade aid -GAO
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[December 21, 2021] By
P.J. Huffstutter and Leah Douglas
CHICAGO (Reuters) -The Department of Agriculture overpaid U.S. corn
farmers in 2019 by around $3 billion for impacts from former President
Donald J. Trump's trade policies, in part because the agency
over-estimated the value of their lost export business, according to a
nonpartisan government agency report released Monday.
The Market Facilitation Program in 2018 and 2019 distributed $23 billion
in payments to farmers under the USDA's Farm Service Agency to help
offset the heavy blows farmers faced in the wake of Trump's trade war
with China and other top export markets.
Payments to corn farmers were approximately $3 billion more than USDA's
final estimated damages from the trade war, while soybean, sorghum, and
cotton farmers received less than the estimated trade damage, the report
from the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) found.
The report, requested by the U.S. Senate Agriculture Committee, also
found that the way USDA distributed payments led to producers in
different regions receiving different payments for the same crop.
Farmers in the South benefited the most, according to the report, while
farmers in the Northeast and West received the least amount in payments.
At the time, the widely varying payouts confused and irritated farmers,
as well as local USDA employees who received limited training on the
program and struggled to process applications and payments.
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Corn crops are seen being harvested from inside a farmer's combine
in Eldon, Iowa U.S. October 5, 2019. Picture taken October 5, 2019.
REUTERS/Kia Johnson/File Photo
"We recommended better reviews and greater transparency in USDA
analyses" going forward, the GAO said in a statement on Monday
announcing the report.
The GAO recommended that USDA’s Office of the Chief Economist (OCE) be
more transparent in its methodology process, as well as revise its
processes for assessing the baselines by which farmers are granted aid.
OCE disagreed with the report's findings and said its team did their
job; that GAO's recommendations should not be aimed at OCE; and that the
problem was with policy decisions in which it was not involved,
according to an Oct. 21 letter it sent to the GAO.
"The role of USDA’s Office of the Chief Economist is to provide
data-driven analysis. They did that," a USDA spokesperson said in a
statement to Reuters. "What happened from that point on was in the hands
of President Trump’s political appointees."
(Reporting By P.J. Huffstutter in Chicago and Leah Douglas in
Washington; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and David Gregorio)
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