The Mercury News

Trump plans $12B in aid to farmers hurt by tariffs

- By Damian Paletta and Caitlin Dewey

WASHINGTON >> The Trump administra­tion on Tuesday announced up to $12 billion in emergency aid to farmers caught in an escalating trade war, seeking to temper growing Republican dissent over President Donald Trump’s trade policies.

The aid is designed to help farmers facing tariffs in China, Mexico and other countries that imposed the levies on U.S. products in response to Trump’s new tariffs on imported steel and aluminum. It is the latest sign that growing trade tensions between the United States and other countries are unlikely to send soon.

White House officials say farmers will begin seeing payments by September, and they hope the payments will quiet protests by farm groups and lawmakers — many of them Republican­s — who contend that Trump’s confrontat­ional trade policy is harming American farmers months before the 2018 midterm elections.

Trump defended his approach Tuesday during a speech in Missouri, pleading with the public to “be a little patient” and arguing that farmers would eventually be “the biggest beneficiar­y” of his policies.

But many Republican­s criticized the administra­tion’s aid package, saying the president should back off his trade war and help farmers regain more access to foreign markets, rather than offering them government payments.

“If tariffs punish farmers, the answer is not welfare for farmers. The answer is remove the tariffs,” Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., wrote Tuesday on Twitter, echoing many Republican­s.

“The trade war is cutting the legs out from under farmers and White House’s ‘plan’ is to spend $12 billion

on gold crutches. America’s farmers don’t want to be paid to lose — they want to win by feeding the world,” said Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb.

The $12 billion plan demonstrat­es Trump’s willingnes­s to use his power to further influence the economy, first imposing tariffs and then bailing out people harmed by his approach. In recent weeks, Trump has taken steps to try to lower oil prices and has publicly criticized the Federal Reserve over planned interest-rate increases, all actions taken with an eye to keeping up economic growth ahead of

the midterm elections.

But Republican­s feared they could face a huge backlash tied to Trump’s trade approach, particular­ly among farmers. Several key Senate races occur this fall in states with strong ties to agricultur­e, including Missouri, North Dakota and Indiana. The outcomes of those races in November could determine control of the Senate next year.

The new package does not need approval from Congress. It would include direct payments to farmers, efforts to promote U.S. goods abroad and an expansion of

a program that purchases surplus farm output and distribute­s it to food banks and other anti-hunger programs.

Administra­tion officials said the program aims to compensate farmers for how much they would lose as a result of the trade war, in part because of lost sales and lower prices. Trump ordered Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Purdue several months ago to begin work on the plan.

A handful of Democrats and Republican­s backed the aid package.

“Our president stood up to a bully; now he’s standing up for rural America,” said

House Agricultur­e Committee Chairman Michael Conaway, R-Texas, referring to Trump’s trade struggle with China. “This is the right fight to have, but in the meantime, our producers have got to ... live, while this fight’s going on.”

The plan will rely in large part on a 1933 program called the Commodity Credit Corp., a division of the Agricultur­e Department created during the Great Depression to provide financial backup for farmers.

The Agricultur­e Department already spends more than $10 billion annually on a range of farm supports under the CCC, including trade promotion for crops and purchases of surplus farm goods.

While such efforts are widely popular in rural states, some anti-spending Republican­s and urban Democrats have said they unfairly prop up agribusine­sses at taxpayers’ expense. Trump’s proposed 2019 budget also would have slashed funding for the CCC.

In the past four months, Trump has imposed tariffs against steel and aluminum imports from China, Canada, Mexico, the European Union, Japan and other countries. He is threatenin­g to extend the tariffs to cars, uranium and other imports.

Several of the countries have responded to Trump’s trade measures by imposing tariffs of their own, and farmers have complained that they are the victims of retaliatio­n from other countries, on which they rely to sell their products.

China, for example, has announced it is imposing tariffs on imports of U.S. soybeans, diverting some of its purchasing to Brazilian production.

While U.S. farmers have complained for months about the brewing trade war, Trump has showed no signs of backing down.

“Tariffs are the greatest!” he wrote Tuesday morning. “Either a country which has treated the United States unfairly on Trade negotiates a fair deal, or it gets hit with Tariffs. It’s as simple as that — and everybody’s talking!”

Some White House officials had hoped that other countries would quickly offer concession­s before Trump’s trade conflict escalated further. But conservati­ve critics of the White House’s approach said that Trump’s move suggests an open-ended conflict.

Former Congressio­nal Budget Office director Douglas Holtz-Eakin said the emergency aid for farmers is likely to be considered Trump’s first taxpayer funded bailout of private entities, an unusual occurrence during a strong economy.

 ?? BARRETT EMKE — BLOOMBERG ?? A $12 billion farm aid plan to offset tariffs was announced by the Trump administra­tion Tuesday.
BARRETT EMKE — BLOOMBERG A $12 billion farm aid plan to offset tariffs was announced by the Trump administra­tion Tuesday.

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