Business World

US-China trade dispute sows confusion in farmer planting plans

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CHICAGO — Tom Giessel is cutting back on plantings this year on his farm in central Kansas as he reckons with a drought, a glut in global grains supply and trade tensions between the United States and China.

About 200 miles away in the northweste­rn part of the state, farmer Janet Bear swapped the sorghum seed she ordered for corn, after top importer China slapped steep anti-dumping investigat­ion into US sorghum. The action pushed down US prices and made the crop less profitable.

China dropped its probe on Friday, retreating from a dispute that had upended global grains markets.

Beijing separately threatened last month to slap an aggressive 25% tariff on US soybeans, the single most valuable US agricultur­al export to China, worth about $12 billion annually.

The salvos from China came in reaction to threats from US President Donald Trump to impose up to $150 billion in punitive tariffs to lower trade deficits and combat what he calls Beijing’s misappropr­iation of US technology. Beijing has threatened equal retaliatio­n, including tariffs on some of its largest US imports, including aircraft, autos and agricultur­al commoditie­s.

The conflict between the world’s two largest economies has sown uncertaint­y in the US heartland about what crops will be profitable come harvest. Some farmers have changed from one crop to another. Others have decided to leave some land fallow rather than risk growing a money-losing crop.

Nationally, US farmers are set to plant the fewest acres with crops in seven years, according to the most recent farmer survey from the US Department of Agricultur­e. The agency’s forecast for 318 million crop acres is down just 0.4% from 2017, but it signals curbs in plantings of everything from corn and soybeans to sugar beets and sunflowers.

The trade dispute adds another layer of complexity to US farmers’ decisions as they wonder whether one of the biggest buyers in global agricultur­al markets, China, will want to import US produce and in what volumes.

Farmers are already struggling financiall­y to deal with incomes that are less than half what they were in 2013 because the prices of staples such as corn, soy and wheat have fallen amid massive global harvests in recent years.

Giessel plans to leave an extra 100 acres unplanted with corn or sorghum — about 8% more than he usually leaves fallow — because of poor profit margins.

“I feel like I’ve been whipsawed by all of this trade business,” he said on Friday.

Farmers could still change their planting plans depending on weather, price fluctuatio­ns and the whims of trade policy. Last year, they ended up planting 0.7% more than the USDA initially projected.

Land that is less productive may be left fallow this year or set aside for other purposes, such as hunting or grazing livestock, said Warren Preston, the USDA’s deputy chief economist.

“Trade uncertaint­y plays a role,” Preston said. “It is just one of many factors that influence farmers’ planting decisions.”

Some of the biggest shifts in plantings of major crops are expected on farms in the Great Plains and across the Midwest.

In Kansas, plantings are expected to drop 7% for corn and 5% for soybeans. Oklahoma corn plantings are projected to fall 11%, and its soy plantings are expected to decline 13%, according to the USDA.

Bear, who farms near Brewster, Kansas, said she switched 640 acres to corn from sorghum, a livestock feed also known as milo. Recent rains encouraged her to plant corn, which allows her to avoid a certain type of pest that infests sorghum fields and gives her a better chance at a profit, she said.

“We were better on milo (prices) prior to the anti- dumping campaign,” Bear said.

In Garden City, Kansas, where sorghum and corn compete for demand, sorghum was fetching about $3.48 per bushel and corn about $3.78 per bushel. Prior to China launching the investigat­ion, the two commoditie­s were trading nearly at parity.

Oklahoma farmer Zach Rendel said corn prices were stronger than sorghum partially due to China’s anti- dumping action against sorghum. He planted 900 acres of sorghum last year and will only plant 100 acres this year.

“The China investigat­ion has scared guys,” he said. “Corn was more appealing to me.”—

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