The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Trade war backfire: Steel tariff shrapnel hits US farmers

-

KANE COUNTY, ILLINOIS: Lucas Strom, who runs a centuryold family farm in rural Illinois, cancelled an order to buy a new US$71,000 grain storage bin last month – after the seller raised the price 5 per cent in a day.

The reason: steel prices jumped right after US President Donald Trump announced tariffs.

Throughout US farm country, where Trump has enjoyed strong support, tariffs on steel and aluminium imports are boosting costs for equipment and infrastruc­ture and causing some farmers and agricultur­al firms to scrap purchases and expansion plans, according to Reuters’ interviews with farmers, manufactur­ers, constructi­on firms and food shippers.

The impact of rising steel prices on agricultur­e illustrate­s the unintended and unpredicta­ble consequenc­es of aggressive protection­ism in a global economy.

And the blow comes as farmers fear a more direct hit from retaliator­y tariffs threatened by China on crops such as sorghum and soybeans, the most valuable US agricultur­al export.

A&P Grain Systems in Maple Park, Illinois – the seller of the storage bin Strom wanted to buy with a neighbouri­ng farmer – raised its price two days after Trump announced aluminium and steel tariffs on March 1 to protect US producers of the metals. Strom and his neighbour backed out.

“Would that price destroy us? No,” Strom said. “But these days, you have to be smart about your expenses.”

The metals tariffs also hitting makers and sellers of farm equipment, from smaller firms like A&P Grain to global giants such as Deere & Co and Caterpilla­r Inc. Such firms are struggling with whether and how to pass along their higher raw materials costs to farmers who are already reeling from low commodity prices amid a global grains glut.

The world’s two largest economies have threatened each other with tariffs on tens of billions of dollars of goods recent weeks.

Trump imposed tariffs of 25 per cent on steel and 10 per cent on aluminium in a move mainly aimed at curbing imports from China.

He has since temporaril­y excluded the European Union and six other allies from the duties and given them until May 1 to negotiate permanent exemptions.

A&P Grain President Dave Altepeter said the steel used in their bins is made in the United States, but domestic steel prices also have soared because of the tariffs.

US steel mills typically adjust their prices once a year, normally in the first quarter, Altepeter said. But this year, those prices have jumped four times, he said.

The price of steel used in A&P’s grain bins has jumped about 20 per cent since January 1.

“Any time there’s any typeof negative talk that affects the steel mill, they’ve raised the price,” said Altepeter.

Last year, about 95,000 tons of steel was shipped to the agricultur­e industry, compared to the 14 million tons for the US auto industry, according to the American Iron and Steel Institute, an industry group. Other factors had been driving up steel prices before the recent trade disputes, including an improving global economy and accelerati­ng manufactur­ing and constructi­on, particular­ly in the US.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia