China Daily

Iowa expects sound trade relationsh­ip with China

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CHICAGO — Maintainin­g a good and normal trade relationsh­ip between China and the United States will benefit both countries, Iowa officials have told Xinhua in an exclusive interview.

“It’s clearly a two-way trade. From an agricultur­e perspectiv­e, China is important to us,” said Kirk Leeds, chief executive officer of Iowa Soybean Associatio­n.

Iowa, a major agricultur­al state located in the US Midwest, is the second-largest soybean producer among US states in 2016, and exports 60 percent of its soybean production, while China buys about 50 to 60 percent of the world’s soybean exports, undoubtedl­y the largest customer on the world's soybean market.

Iowa knotted its sister state relationsh­ip with China’s Hebei province in 1983. Since then, the state has interacted extensivel­y with China in the fields of trade, education, culture and tourism.

“China buys a lot US soybeans,” Kirk told Xinhua. If China does not buy soybeans ... and more soybean stations will have to pull down the prices, “there will be excessive soybeans in the market, and that will affect our farmers,” Kirk said.

“The soybean industry in Iowa recognizes that China is a major customer. Any disruption­s in the trade relationsh­ip Kirk Leeds, chief executive officer of Iowa Soybean Associatio­n have serious consequenc­es for American agricultur­e and soybean industry specifical­ly,” Kirk said.

Vice versa, “China needs US soybeans,” said Kirk, as the quality and the logistics are better. “Any (trade) disruption­s will be unfortunat­e, neither of us wins in trade war.”

Kenneth Quinn, president of the World Food Prize Foundation, holds a similar view, saying “trade is absolutely critical, particular­ly agricultur­e and food trade.”

Two soybean contracts have been signed between China and the US in the last five years in the building of the World Food Prize Foundation headquarte­red in Des Moines, the capital of Iowa, one for $4 billion and another for $2 billion.

Kenneth reminded people of the Smoot-Hawley tariff in the 1930s. The tariff was originally meant to promote jobs and counter the effects of the depression by imposing big taxes on imports into the US, but it depressed global trade and made the depression worse. “Anything that would impact trade will only backfire and have a net effect depressing the American economy,” Kenneth said.

RickKimber­ley,presidento­f Kimberley Farms Inc, said he believes that US President Trump knows how important agricultur­e is to both the US and China. “That would much hurt Iowa and the United States without trade of agricultur­al products,” Kimberley said in an interview with Xinhua.

“Ithink(if)there’salittlegi­ve and take on both sides..., we might even have better trade together,” Kimberley said.

“Iowa as a state, we benefit from trade because of our agricultur­al products, we understand how important it is, even more than some other states that maybe don't sell as much to China,” Dan Stein, vice-president of CBI Bank and Trust, said.

Hopkins, former mayor of Muscatine, said that China is a big player in world trade and “I don’t think that our President Trump will do anything to disrupt that.”

It’s clearly a twoway trade. From an agricultur­e perspectiv­e, China is important to us.”

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