USA TODAY US Edition

Tariffs sow concern in Trump stronghold

Chinese duties target agricultur­al products important to Iowa economy

- Donnelle Eller

Eastern Iowa farmer Dave Walton isn’t happy about being a pawn in the growing trade war between the United States and China.

But he’s also not ready to dump his support for President Trump, who last week proposed another

$100 billion in trade sanctions on Chinese goods.

That’s on top of $50 billion in tariffs on flat-screen TVs, steel, aluminum and more than 1,000 other products.

“I don’t think we can say he’s hurt us yet. But the clock is ticking,” said Walton, who raises corn, soybeans and cattle near Wilton, Iowa.

“They’ve got about two months to negotiate a better agreement between the two countries,” Walton said. “If those sanctions go into place, that changes the game.

“I’ll have to revisit my support,” the fourth-generation farmer said.

❚ “China is clearly putting politics over economics”: Trump said the latest tariffs are in response to China’s retaliatio­n against “American farmers and manufactur­ers.”

Last week, China responded to U.S. sanctions with duties on

$50 billion of U.S. products, including soybeans, beef, corn and pork, products all important to Iowa’s economy.

The 25% tariff on pork already has been put in place, costing Iowa, the nation’s top pork producer,

$400 million from declining prices, said Dermot Hayes, an Iowa State University agricultur­al economist.

If China responds with $100 billion in new tariffs, it will cover most U.S. products, Hayes said.

The U.S. exported about $130 billion in goods to China last year while importing nearly $506 billion in Chinese goods, leaving the U.S. with a

$375 billion deficit.

Hayes said China is targeting Trump supporters with its farm sanctions, especially tariffs on soybeans.

“China is clearly putting politics over economics,” Hayes said, adding the country needs U.S. soybeans.

China imports about 60% of the world’s soybeans, last year buying

$14 billion worth from U.S. growers. Iowa growers estimate that every third row of beans planted in the state is exported to China. Iowa ranked second nationally in soybean production last year.

On Tuesday, China’s president, Xi Jinping, made possible concession­s in the escalating trade fight. He promised to cut China’s auto tariffs and improve intellectu­al property protection, aiming to defuse a dispute with Washington that investors worry could set back the global economic recovery.

“I’m not thrilled about us being used as a pawn,” said Walton, who blames both the U.S. and China for putting agricultur­e in the middle of

the trade fight.

❚ “A cold bucket of water”: Trump has directed Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue to “use his broad authority to implement a plan to protect American farmers and agricultur­e.”

The tariffs are rippling into Iowa manufactur­ing as well.

The state is home to large ag equipment manufactur­ers that include Deere, Kinze and Vermeer, and seed giant Pioneer, a unit of DowDuPont’s Corteva Agriscienc­e.

Deere and DowDuPont leaders have said they’re concerned the proposed tariffs would hurt profits, which are tied to the economic health of farmers.

David Zrostlik, president of Stellar Industries, the maker of large service trucks in Garner, Iowa, was a Trump supporter two years ago. He said he likes the president’s moves, cutting taxes and reevaluati­ng regulation­s.

The tariffs, though, “are a cold bucket of water,” he said.

“There are a better ways to get things negotiated than putting all American industry and agricultur­e in peril,” Zrostlik said.

❚ “It’s how Trump works”: Tim Hagle, a University of Iowa political scientist, said he thinks many Iowans will “wait and see” how Trump’s trade negotiatio­ns play out.

The New York billionair­e developer received 51% of the Iowa vote in 2016, winning in

93 of 99 counties.

In February, 44% of Iowans approved of his job performanc­e, inching up from 35% in December, a Des Moines Register/ Mediacom Iowa Poll showed.

Hagle said many supporters see the escalating trade threats as part of Trump’s negotiatin­g tactics.

“It’s how Trump works,” he said. “He says some things that get people upset, but it’s basically tough talk initially, and then he comes back from that.”

Hagle said “we saw that with NAFTA,” where the president talked about ending the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico. “The negotiatio­ns are ongoing, and he’s softened his language somewhat there,” he said.

 ?? RODNEY WHITE AND MICHAEL ZAMORA ?? Iowa growers estimate that every third row of soybeans planted in the state is exported to China.
RODNEY WHITE AND MICHAEL ZAMORA Iowa growers estimate that every third row of soybeans planted in the state is exported to China.
 ?? KELSEY KREMER/THE DES MOINES REGISTER AND PULITZER CENTER ?? Rick Kimberley, a fifth-generation farmer from Maxwell, Iowa, hosted Xi Jinping when the Chinese president visited Iowa in 2012.
KELSEY KREMER/THE DES MOINES REGISTER AND PULITZER CENTER Rick Kimberley, a fifth-generation farmer from Maxwell, Iowa, hosted Xi Jinping when the Chinese president visited Iowa in 2012.

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