Chicago — US farmers want something from president-elect Donald Trump that his trade policies mean he is unlikely to deliver: increased access to the market of top soya importer China.
Trump’s Republican party enjoys wide support across the US farm belt, where he won most states in Tuesday’s election. Farmers typically back him even though the US agriculture sector was one of the hardest hit during the US-China trade war that Trump fought during his first administration.
China targeted the US farm community with retaliatory tariffs on imports of American agricultural goods, after Trump imposed tariffs on a wide range of goods from China. US soya exports to China have never recovered, in fact, China has slashed its dependence on US farm goods since the 2018 trade war.
Farmers and two potential contenders for the position of Trump’s agriculture secretary said they want his administration to focus on boosting US exports and crafting trade deals to help revitalise the sector.
“We really need to get out there and represent the US products and make sure that we get some sales on the books,” said Kip Tom, an Indiana maize and soya bean farmer who served as ambassador to the UN food agency during Trump’s first term.
But Trump is threatening new tariffs on Chinese imports and Beijing is likely to reciprocate. That would lead to less access, not more, to China’s agriculture import market. Trump would also likely hit imports from other countries farmers would want to sell into with tariffs.
Trump, who beat Democratic vice-president Kamala Harris in the presidential election, has vowed to impose a 60% tariff on Chinese goods and at least a 10% levy on all other imports in his second term.
“I think it’s terribly naive of anyone to think that the election of Trump and the Republican party will be positive for agriculture,” said Jay O’Neil, a grain industry consultant and former economist at Kansas State University.
A new round of trade wars would come at a tough time. US maize and soya prices tumbled to 2020 lows this year under pressure from huge harvests and intense competition for global export sales from rival supplier Brazil. That has hit the US agriculture economy hard and reduced demand for tractors, combines and other agricultural equipment from companies such as Deere & Company.
The nation is projected to face a record $42.5bn agricultural trade deficit in 2025, according to the US department of agriculture.
US soya bean exports to China fell to about 26.4-million tonnes last year from 36.1-million in 2016 and 31.7-million in 2017, before the last trade war, the agency said.
Beijing failed to meet obligations for US agricultural purchases under a 2020 trade deal signed with Trump to end the trade war, according to the Census Bureau.
Still, farmers said they think a new dispute with Beijing would be short lived and less economically painful.
“It won’t be near as prolonged as it was the first time because they know he’s serious,” said Texas agriculture commissioner Sid Miller, who worked to elect Trump.
Miller and Tom are seen as potential contenders for secretary of the agriculture department.
Trump’s first administration kept farmers onside with generous subsidies to offset lost US sales to China from the trade war. Soya bean farmers received $5.4bn more in aid than they lost in price impact, a University of California-Davis study found.
Another trade war could cost soya farmers $3.6bn-$5.9bn in annual production value, depending on how the dispute plays out, according to an October study from the National Corn Growers Association and American Soybean Association.
For maize, Brazil overtook the US as China’s top supplier in 2023, just one year after Beijing approved purchases from the South American agricultural powerhouse.
“We’ve let Brazil, Argentina, Australia and New Zealand, and everybody else beat us to the punch,” Miller said. “We’ve got to reverse that trend.”
US soya bean exports to China were down 13% from a year ago through September and maize exports sank 71%, according to agriculture department data.
Such declines worry Dave Kestel, a maize and soya grower in Manhattan, Illinois, who used a plough to carve “Trump” in giant letters in a farm field ahead of the election.
Still, a trade battle with China could ultimately benefit US workers, despite some temporary pain, he said.
“People on the other side are saying ‘Oh my god, he’s going to impose these tariffs’,” said Kestel, who voted for Trump.
“It’s about bringing businesses back here again.”
Reuters
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