Arab Times

US farmers stressed, angry at trade wars with China and others

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NEW YORK, June 18, (AFP): US farmers find themselves in the crosshairs of a trade war with China and others launched by President Donald Trump, who was elected with the support of many in rural America.

On Friday, Trump announced longthreat­ened trade tariffs on tens of billions of dollars worth of Chinese goods, sparking an immediate retaliatio­n from Beijing on an equivalent of US products including agricultur­al goods, notably soy.

“For American farmers, this isn’t theoretica­l anymore, it’s downright scary,” the Farmers for Free Trade lobbying group said of the prospects for escalating tariffs.

“It’s no longer a negotiatin­g tactic, it’s a tax on their livelihood­s.”

China is the largest buyer of soy beans, buying $12 billion in 2017, about 30 per cent of the US harvest.

“We were already in a depressed market. These trade uncertaint­ies add a lot of stress to this situation,” said Jamie Beyer, a farmer in Wheaton, Minnesota who grows soybean, corn, sugar beets, wheat and alfalfa.

“We feel these tariffs are very damaging to our agricultur­al economy.”

Farmers are the most at risk in this trade battle, as their incomes already were falling, declining by around 50 per cent since 2013, and this year expected to reach the lowest level since 2006. The sector already was shaken up by the difficult negotiatio­ns on the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) with Canada and Mexico, two major importers of agricultur­al products.

On her family farm in Oklahoma, Hope Pjesky raises cattle and grows winter wheat, and says she is “very nervous” about recent developmen­ts.

“Unfortunat­ely, agricultur­e seems to be the industry that they hit back on when there is retaliatio­n. I just wish there were a better way to go about addressing that issue,” she said.

That is according to plan, since US trading partners have singled out American products from states strongly supportive of Trump, in hopes of increasing the pressure on him to reconsider.

But Pjesky noted that “there are a lot of people who voted for him that still have faith that it is just going to end up well.”

It is difficult to quantify the precise cost of Chinese sanctions, but Missouri corn and soybean farmer Blake Hurst said he already is seeing an impact on prices.

The weather remains the main factor influencin­g the price of corn, wheat, soybeans and cotton, but the threat of renewed tensions between Beijing and Washington hit the market hard this week and the soybean price fell by more than six percent.

“It will affect our profitabil­ity” and cut the number of acres cultivated, he said.

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