Business World

USDA says nearly $840M in aid paid to farmers to date

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WASHINGTON — US Department of Agricultur­e has paid out nearly $840 million to farmers to date as part of a promised $12 billion aid program rolled out by President Donald Trump last July to offset losses from the imposition of tariffs on American exports.

A total of $837.8 million to date has been paid out with the top five commoditie­s being soybeans, wheat, corn, dairy and hogs, USDA told Reuters. The five states that received the highest amount of aid were Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Indiana, and Minnesota.

The aid delivered remains a fraction of the promised amount at a time when the American farmers are struggling with loss of export markets from trade wars.

Several trade groups such as dairy farmers have complained that the amount they received was far below their losses.

The Trump administra­tion in late May announced tariffs of 25 percent on steel imports and 10 percent on aluminum imports, prompting retaliatio­n from top trading partners that have spilled into agricultur­e.

Washington has also slapped tariffs on $250 billion worth of Chinese goods earlier this year as part of Trump’s vow to cut the US trade deficit with China.

Beijing retaliated by hitting $110 billion of US products, including the agricultur­e sector, prompting the USDA to offer compensati­on to farmers of soybeans, sorghum, corn, wheat, cotton, dairy and hogs.

China, traditiona­lly the biggest buyer of US soybeans, has been largely out of the market, leaving farmers struggling with a supply overhang.

The aid package includes cash payments for farmers of soybeans, sorghum, corn, wheat, cotton, dairy, and hogs. The USDA had already outlined the allocation­s for the first $6 billion at the end of August.

Secretary of Agricultur­e Sonny Perdue said the second $6 billion was set to be outlined in December. He added that there were no plans for now to extend the aid into 2019.

The United States has clinched a new trade deal with Canada and Mexico, key export markets for agricultur­al commoditie­s, dubbed as the new NAFTA, in October but American farmers are yet to see the benefits. —

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