China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Iowa soybean farmers look to Branstad for help

Hope ambassador to China, an ex-Iowa governor, could aid if soybeans restricted

- By AARON HAGSTROM in New York aaronhagst­rom@ chinadaily­usa.com

Iowa farmers are looking to a man from their state now in Beijing, with the hope that he could help avert a US-China trade war.

Some soybean farmers in the Midwestern state are looking to the former Iowa governor and current US Ambassador to China Terry Branstad to help in any possible restrictio­ns on US soybean exports to China — their biggest market.

China imported about $14 billion worth of US soybeans in 2016, or 60 percent of the total US crop, according to the US Department of Agricultur­e (USDA).

Iowa is the second-largest soybean-producing state after Illinois. There are roughly 70,000 to 80,000 soybean farmers in the two states, according to 2012 USDA data.

Grant Kimberley, director of market developmen­t for the Iowa Soybean Associatio­n who has visited China several times in the last 10 years, primarily plants soybeans and corn on his family’s 4,000-acre farm outside of Maxwell.

Xi Jinping, who was then vice-president of China, visited the farm with Branstad in 2012 on his tour of America as an emerging world leader. When Branstad received US President Donald Trump’s nomination for ambassador, Chinese officials described the mustachioe­d 71-year-old as an “old friend of China’’.

“Branstad is a great, honest broker whom both sides respect in Washington and Beijing,” Kimberley said. “I think he is a great guy to work through these challenges and hopefully bring both sides together.”

The challenge may come in the form of Chinese retaliatio­n if Trump accepts the Feb 16 recommenda­tions of the US Commerce Department for heavy tariffs on imports of Chinese steel and aluminum. Trump is required to decide by mid-April whether to accept the recommenda­tions or put forth different ones.

On Thursday, Trump announced that his administra­tion would impose tariffs of 10 percent for aluminum and 25 percent for steel beginning “sometime next week” and lasting for “a long period of time”. It was not clear whether they would apply to all imports or be targeted toward specific countries.

The tariffs could lead to a tit-for-tat trade war with China, the European Union and other major world trade powers.

“I can’t think personally of any better spokespers­on on behalf of US agricultur­e that we could have representi­ng us in China right now,” Paul Burke, North Asia regional director for the US Soybean Export Council, told China Daily. “Certainly, he has a very familiar and friendly relationsh­ip with President Xi Jinping and Vice-Premier Wang Yang.”

There was no immediate comment from Branstad.

China has been researchin­g the potential impact of trade measures on soybeans imported from the US for more than a year, according to Burke.

Soybean curbs would directly affect farmers in Midwestern US states that voted for Trump’s election and that he needs to win re-election in 2020. All but two of the top 10 soybean-producing states — Illinois and Minnesota — voted for Trump.

John Heisdorffe­r, Iowa soybean farmer and president of the American Soybean Associatio­n (ASA) — the national lobbying arm for soybean farmers — said that he met with Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross last summer while Commerce was preparing its tariff recommenda­tions. He said he told Ross a tariff was a bad idea.

“You have to talk between the two government­s,” Heisdorffe­r said. “They are the ones that are going to (make) the tariffs or retaliatio­n-type tariffs. Ambassador Branstad from our home state — it would be nice if he were in on the conversati­on.”

US soybeans comprise 31 percent of China’s supply, according to China’s General Administra­tion of Customs, and are used in cooking oil and feeding the country’s large numbers of pigs to meet the world’s biggest appetite for pork.

Burke said Branstad told Wang in February that if China “wants to show the US government China is actively working to address the trade imbalance between the two countries, then restrictin­g access for US agricultur­e products is completely the wrong move because it’s one of the areas that the US has an economic advantage that can provide high-quality, reliable, safe, wholesome food products to Chinese consumers at economical prices.”

“I don’t think there is a trade war coming at all because China needs our soybeans,” said soybean farmer April Hemmes, who has farmed 900 acres near Hamton for 33 years and went to China twice last year.

A restrictio­n on soybeans — which is a $41 billion industry in the US — would be a net negative for both China and the US, Kimberley said, causing a global re-balancing of the soybean market.

“If both sides think through this logically, it is kind of like a mutually assured destructio­n,” Kimberley said.

I think he is a great guy to work through these challenges ... ”

Grant Kimberely, market developmen­t director for the Iowa Soybean Associatio­n, speaking of Terry Branstad $14b value of soybeans US exported to China in 2016

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States