The Record (Troy, NY)

Farmers to get aid checks

Some worry bailout won’t be enough

- By Juliet Linderman Associated Press

WASHINGTON » Farmers across the United States will soon begin receiving government checks as part of a billion- dollar bailout to buoy growers experienci­ng financial strain from President Donald Trump’s trade disputes with China.

But even those poised for big payouts worry it won’t be enough. And while support for Trump is near unwavering in the heartland, some growers say that with the November election nearing, such disappoint­ing aid outcomes could potentiall­y affect their vote.

“It’s pretty obvious that the rural agricultur­e communitie­s helped elect this administra­tion, but the way things are going I believe farmers are going to have to vote with their checkbook when it comes time,” said Kevin Skunes, a corn and soybean grower from Arthur, North Dakota and president of the National Corn Growers Associatio­n.

Corn farmers get the smallest slice of the aid pie. Corn groups estimate a loss of 44 cents per bushel, but they’re poised to receive just a single penny per bushel.

“If these issues haven’t been resolved, there could be a change in the way farmers vote,” Skunes said. “A person has to consider all things.”

Farmers are already feeling the impact of Trump’s trade tiffs with China and other countries. China has hit back hard, responding with its own set of tariffs on U. S. agricultur­al products and other goods.

The Trump administra­tion is providing up to $12 billion in emergency relief funds for American farmers, with roughly $6 billion in an initial round. The three-pronged plan includes $4.7 billion in payments to corn, cotton, soybean, dairy, pork and sorghum farmers. The rest is for developing new foreign markets for Americangr­own commoditie­s and purchasing more than two dozen select products, including certain fresh fruits and vegetables, nuts, meat and dairy.

Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue announced last month that soybean growers will get the largest checks, at $1.65 per bushel for a total of $3.6 billion. China is the world’s leading buyer of American soybeans, purchasing roughly 60 percent of the U.S. crop. But since Beijing imposed a 25 percent tariff on soybean, imports prices have plunged.

The lack of initial detail about how the calculatio­ns were made left farmers scratching their heads.

Asked about the confusion, Rob Johansson, the Agricultur­e Department’s chief economist, responded that the USDA took into ac- count a number of factors “including the share of production that is exported and the value of trade directly affected by the retaliator­y tariffs.” “The level of damage is not the same for each commodity,” he said in a written response to questions submitted by The Associated Press. He estimated that there would be more than 784,000 applicatio­ns for relief. The USDA has since released a detailed analysis of how the department made its calculatio­ns. The breakdown has stunned corn and wheat farmers who say the payments are uneven and won’t do much of anything to help keep struggling farms afloat. A lobbying group that represents wheat growers is challengin­g the way the administra­tion determined payments for wheat farmers, who are set to receive 14 cents a bushel. Chandler Goule, CEO of the National Associatio­n of Wheat Growers, said the USDA assumed U. S. wheat would be sold to China this year when it made its calculatio­ns. But the assumption was flawed, he said. China typically makes its requests for American wheat between March and June. U. S. wheat farmers have sold, on average, 20 million bushels of wheat to

China over the past three years. But none came this year, Goule said, as Trump escalated his threatenin­g rhetoric on trade with Beijing. He hopes the perbushel rate for wheat goes up if there’s a second round of payments.

“I am very certain that we will not sell any wheat to China this year,” Goule said. “The window we sell in has come and gone.”

The response among farmers has been mixed. While some are grateful for the help, most are eager for the trade disputes to be quickly resolved.

“Nobody wants to have an aid package. I mean, if you’re a farmer you’re in the business of producing a crop. We just want a fair price for it,” said Joel Schreurs, a soybean and corn producer near Tyler in southweste­rn Minnesota who sits on the board of both the American Soybean Associatio­n and the Minnesota Soybean Growers Associatio­n.

His personal operation is about 1,000 acres. He farms an additional 500 acres with his son-in-law and other relatives. He estimates that the tariffs would cost him $40,000 to $50,000 in lost income and that he would get $16,000 to $20,000 in emergency aid.

Schreurs worries that it will be hard for farmers to get back the buyers they’ll

lose as a result of the trade wars. “And in the short term we have to find another home for those beans, otherwise they’re going to pile up and it will keep prices depressed,” he said.

In the Midwest, growers typically farm both corn and soybeans. Those farmers would get payments for both under the program, which began sign-ups Sept. 4.

Perdue said checks could start going out as soon as the end of September for crops that have already been harvested; payouts are based on yield.

In a recent C- SPAN interview, Perdue said he understand­s growers’ frustratio­ns.

“Farmers always live in unpredicta­ble times,” he said. “They’re very resilient, but obviously the longer trade issues go on the longer it bears on them regarding what is the future.”

Jack Maloney says corn farmers will be getting so little in bailout aid that for roughly 200,000 bushels of corn a farmer would get only about $2,000 for their losses.

“That’s not even beer money,” said the Brownsburg, Indiana, corn and soybean grower.

Maloney, 62, began farming full time in 1978 and now has two employees. He said some fellow farmers are angry and upset.

“Agricultur­e has always been the butt of all the trade wars,” he said, adding that this isn’t the first time he’s seen trade disruption­s affect the agricultur­al markets.

Maloney said he had already cut back on expenses during the past three years and hasn’t taken a paycheck from his farm for more than a year because of tough times before the trade war began. He said the recent tumult has dashed hopes for stabilizin­g agricultur­al markets anytime soon.

“We were seeing a little light at the end of the tunnel — the markets were im-

proving a little,” he said, “and then this tariff thing happened and this trade war.”

Daniel Weinand worries the market downturn could be the death knell for his farm. Weinand, 30, grows corn, canola and yellow peas on 900 acres of rented land near Hazen, North Dakota. He said he expects to reap about 30,000 bushels of corn, and to receive about $300 in aid.

“A penny a bushel on corn, it’s not that it’s entirely worthless. But it almost is,” he said. “I don’t know how many more years I can weather.”

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY—THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jack Maloney looks over one of the soybean fields on his Little Ireland Farms in Brownsburg, Ind., Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2018. Maloney, who farms about 2,000acres in Hendricks Count, said the aid for farmers is “a nice gesture” but what farmers really want is free trade, not government handouts.
MICHAEL CONROY—THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jack Maloney looks over one of the soybean fields on his Little Ireland Farms in Brownsburg, Ind., Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2018. Maloney, who farms about 2,000acres in Hendricks Count, said the aid for farmers is “a nice gesture” but what farmers really want is free trade, not government handouts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States