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Farmers don’t expect export surge to China

U.S.-China trade truce is welcome, but few farmers see immediate bump

- Donnelle Eller

A new U.S.-China trade truce is welcome news, Iowa farm leaders say, but few expect to see an immediate bump in soybean or pork exports to Beijing despite assurances from China that it will purchase “a very substantia­l” amount of American goods.

“Any positive news is good,” said Kirk Leeds, CEO of the Iowa Soybean Associatio­n, about President Donald Trump’s meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping during the Group of 20 summit in Argentina over the weekend.

“That meeting could have gone the other way – it could have turned into a meeting they walked out of without issuing a joint statement,” Leeds said. “The fact that there was clearly a posi- tive conversati­on is reason to be optimistic.”

Trump and Xi reached a trade ceasefire agreement that will give negotiator­s 90 days to start structurin­g a new trade pact. During that time, the U.S. will halt plans to increase tariffs on $200 billion in Chinese goods to 25 percent, and China will purchase “a very substantia­l amount of American agricultur­e, energy and industrial goods” to cut the trade imbalance between the countries, the White House said.

The goods include soybeans, beef, oranges, pistachios and red wine – but not pork.

The president said the deal will “have an incredibly positive impact on ... every type of product.”

“Farmers will be a a very BIG and FAST beneficiar­y of our deal with China,” Trump tweeted Monday. “They intend to start purchasing agricultur­al product immediatel­y. We make the finest and cleanest product in the World, and that is what China wants. Farmers, I LOVE YOU!”

The price for soybeans slated for January 2019 delivery climbed 6 cents Tuesday, following a rise of 11 cents Monday, showing a muted reaction to the news.

“The markets aren’t overly excited. They’re like most of us in thinking, ‘Yes, it’s positive, but there are very few details,’ ” Leeds said, noting the Chinese media hadn’t reported Monday that the country plans to make any substantia­l purchases.

Dermot Hayes, an Iowa State University economist, said private Chinese buyers are unlikely to buy U.S. farm goods that are more expensive compared with global competitio­n.

“Maybe the Chinese government will make the purchases,” Hayes said.

If China does begin buying U.S. soybeans soon, it could help alleviate farm fears that America could lose a substantia­l portion of the Chinese market, said Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.

“That would probably re-establish our markets, so the long-term problems that soybean producers thought we’d have maybe won’t be as serious,” Grassley said.

“I won’t say that we haven’t lost some markets, but that loss would be greatly diminished” with a trade resolution, he said.

“We don’t have to have one gigantic agreement settled in 90 days, but we do need a show of good-faith progress,” Grassley said.

Leaders at the G20 meeting also signed the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which would replace the existing North American Free Trade Agreement, but it still must be ratified by those countries’ leaders.

Grassley said that might be difficult, given a Democratic-led U.S. House next year.

The president said he plans to cancel the existing NAFTA pact to pressure Congress. Without an agreement, the countries will revert to the high tariffs in place before NAFTA, Grassley said. “I don’t think the Democrats will want to do that.”

Pat McGonegle, CEO of the Iowa Pork Producers Associatio­n, said it’s critical the U.S. get a new agreement with Mexico and Canada.

Mexico was the U.S.’s top pork market last year, importing $1.5 billion. “We still have a 20 percent duty into Mexico of 20 percent, so that’s obviously having an impact,” he said.

 ?? USA TODAY NETWORK ?? The price for soybeans has climbed 17 cents this week, showing a muted reaction to the news.
USA TODAY NETWORK The price for soybeans has climbed 17 cents this week, showing a muted reaction to the news.

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