Business World

US farm aid plan details to be disclosed Monday

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SCHODACK LANDING, N.Y. — US Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue said on Thursday that details of a planned $12 billion aid package for US farmers hurt by the Trump administra­tion’s trade wars will be disclosed on Monday. Perdue, who previously told

the plan would include between $7 billion and $8 billion in direct cash relief for farmers, said it was being reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.

During a trip to upstate New York, Purdue said he hoped to have the program, which will provide relief exclusivel­y from tariffs, up and running after Labor Day.

“It’s not going to make everybody whole. It’s not going to make everybody happy,” he said at a dairy farm in Schodack Landing.

The aid package, announced in July, was expected to include cash for farmers of soybeans, sorghum, corn, wheat, cotton, dairy and hogs. It also was to include government purchases of fruits, nuts, rice, legumes, beef, pork and milk for distributi­on to food banks and nutrition programs.

Perdue has said it would include some $200 million for a trade promotion program to develop new markets.

Trade publicatio­n Agri-Pulse reported this week that the preliminar­y proposal was for a payment rate of $1.65 per bushel to soybean farmers and 1 cent per bushel for corn farmers, citing officials close to the decisionma­king process. Perdue declined to comment on the report.

Based on the USDA’s forecast for a soybean crop of 4.586 billion bushels, that would be worth $7.6 billion in aid for soybeans alone.

China has traditiona­lly bought some 60 percent of US soybeans but has been out of the market since implementi­ng retaliator­y tariffs.

“It’s not going to seem like it’s equitable,” Perdue said of the aid allocation.

He said soybeans, pork and dairy were the three major commoditie­s affected by the tariffs. Other commoditie­s have also posted sharp price declines, but were related to over production, he noted.

The aid plan is intended only for the current crop cycle,

The package was seen as a temporary boost to farmers as the United States and China negotiate trade issues. It has divided Republican­s, some of whom favor free trade and were troubled by what they viewed as the kind of welfare their party has traditiona­lly opposed.

The United States and China escalated their trade war on Thursday, implementi­ng punitive 25 percent tariffs on $16 billion worth of each other’s goods, even as mid-level officials from both sides resumed talks in Washington. —

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