Las Vegas Review-Journal

Worsening of ag woes yielding gripes of wrath

Tariff policies pile on for burdened producers

- By David Pitt The Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa — Even before the specter of a trade war with China and other countries threatened to cost them billions of dollars, American farmers were feeling the squeeze from fluctuatin­g crop prices and other factors that have halved their overall income in recent years.

The threat of countertar­iffs on

U.S. farm goods and the impact of President Donald Trump’s other policies on immigratio­n and biofuels, though, have some farmers more worried than ever about their ability to continue eking out an existence in agricultur­e.

“No matter where you look in ag right now, you see storm clouds on the horizon, and some of those are a lot closer overhead than we’d care for,” said Chad Hart, an agricultur­al economist at Iowa State University.

Trump’s tariff threats earlier this year against China, Mexico, Canada and European Union elicited retaliator­y measures that depressed the prices of certain U.S. agricultur­al products, including corn, soybeans and pork. When $34 billion worth of tariffs against China took effect July 6 and China responded with tariffs of its own, U.S. farmers were already feeling the squeeze from lower crop prices, higher land prices and other factors.

The Department of Agricultur­e predicted before the threat of tariffs and countertar­iffs that U.S. farm income would drop this year to $60 billion, or half the $120 billion of five years ago. That projection is likely high, given what’s transpired since.

Don Bloss, who grows corn, soybeans, sorghum and wheat on his farm in the southeaste­rn Nebraska community of Pawnee City, said he’s already seen a few neighbors quit farming as they struggled to make a profit even before the tariff battle began this year.

“They aren’t making money. One has said the banker is giving up on them,” Bloss said.

Per-bushel soybean prices have fallen 19 percent since early May to a 10-year low and corn is down more than 15 percent. At current prices, most farmers lose money on corn, soybeans and pigs.

U.S. pork producers stand to lose more than $2 billion per year because of plunging hog futures prices, the result of the Chinese retaliator­y tariffs, according to Iowa State University economists’ projection­s.

“If this continues and the USDA does not discover a way to helicopter in and drop buckets of cash into the Corn Belt this fall, then I would not be surprised if there are tractor parades going to D.C. at some point in the next year,” said Scott Irwin, University of Illinois agricultur­al economist.

Meanwhile, Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies have been making it even harder to recruit workers for pork producers, who have relied on immigrants for a third of their workforce.

 ?? Nati Harnik ?? The Associated Press Farmer Don Bloss checks an auger transferri­ng corn Thursday on his farm in Pawnee City, Neb. Some of his neighbors have quit farming becuase it is no longer financiall­y viable for them.
Nati Harnik The Associated Press Farmer Don Bloss checks an auger transferri­ng corn Thursday on his farm in Pawnee City, Neb. Some of his neighbors have quit farming becuase it is no longer financiall­y viable for them.

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