Khaleej Times

[The trade war is] something that’s crying for a resolution. It’s a lose-lose for both the United States and China

- Michael Hirtzer and Tom Polansek

Wally Tyner, Agricultur­al economist at Purdue University

$2.9b

To be lost by US and China each annually on agricultur­e alone

CHICAGO — The United States-China trade war resulted in billions of dollars of losses for both sides in 2018, hitting industries including autos, technology — and, above all, agricultur­e.

Broad pain from trade tariffs outlined by several economists shows that, while specialise­d industries including US soyabean crushing benefited from the dispute, it had an overall detrimenta­l impact on both of the world’s two largest economies.

The losses may give US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpar­t, Xi Jinping, motivation to resolve their trade difference­s before a March 2 deadline, although talks between the economic superpower­s could still devolve.

The US and Chinese economies each lose about $2.9 billion annually due to Beijing’s tariffs on soyabeans, corn, wheat and sorghum alone, said Purdue University agricultur­al economist Wally Tyner.

Disrupted agricultur­al trade hurt both sides particular­ly hard because China is the world’s biggest soyabean importer and last year relied on the United States for $12 billion worth of the oilseed.

China has mostly been buying soya from Brazil since imposing a 25 per cent tariff on American soyabeans in July in retaliatio­n for US tariffs on Chinese goods. The surge in demand pushed Brazilian soya premiums to a record over US soya futures in Chicago, in an example of the trade war reducing sales for US exporters and raising costs for Chinese importers.

“It’s something that’s crying for a resolution,” Tyner said. “It’s a lose-lose for both the United States and China.” Total US agricultur­al export shipments to China for the first 10 months of 2018 fell by 42 per cent from a year earlier to about $8.3 billion, according to the US Department of Agricultur­e.

The most actively-traded soyabean futures contract averaged $8.75 per bushel from July to December 2018, down from an average of $9.76 during the same period a year earlier. As of December 28, futures in the last month of the year were averaging $8.95-1/2 a bushel. That was down from $9.613/4 for all of December last year.

To compensate suffering farmers, the US government has allocated about $11 billion to direct payments and buying agricultur­al goods for government food programs, after consulting economists, including Tyner. —

 ??  ?? Disrupted agricultur­al trade hurt both the US and China particular­ly hard. — AP
Disrupted agricultur­al trade hurt both the US and China particular­ly hard. — AP

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