Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
Painted Mail Pouch barns going, going, but not gone
Pork exports are up 14%; beef exports are down
Miami County family receives Hoosier Homestead Awards 
OBC culinary studio to enhance impact of beef marketing efforts
Baltimore bridge collapse will have some impact on ag industry
Michigan, Ohio latest states to find HPAI in dairy herds
The USDA’s Farmers.gov local dashboard available nationwide
Urban Acres helpng Peoria residents grow food locally
Illinois dairy farmers were digging into soil health week

Farmers expected to plant less corn, more soybeans, in 2024
Deere 4440 cab tractor racked up $18,000 at farm retirement auction
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   
Views and opinions: The road to perdition seems to lead south

If war is hell, then trade wars must be a purgatorial stop along the way. For proof, just look where Election Day 2018 finds American farmers.

Faced with ample production, stale commodity prices and the lowest forecasted national farm income since 2002, U.S. farmers are now waiting for a winter of government “tariff mitigation” payments, while competitors like Brazil and the European Union step into international markets – the Chinese pork trade, for one – that just a year ago favored U.S. firms and farmers.

That’s not fake news.

Illusionary, however, are the recent trade “victories” touted by the Trump White House. Those deals with Canada, Mexico and South Korea, when examined closely by ag trade experts instead of hopeful, Trump-supporting farm groups, hold few, if any, positive changes.

Those extraordinary Canadian dairy concessions touted by the administration in NAFTA 2.0? “Canada’s scorned ‘Class 7’ price for nonfat milk solids, used to lowball U.S. exports of dairy protein powders,” noted The Milkweed’s October issue, “has been barely neutered.”

And, it adds: “Mexico’s 25 percent tariff on U.S. cheese imports” remains.

The picture doesn’t get any rosier when examining soybeans, the other critical U.S. export in tariff limbo. Recent USDA estimates show that 2018/19 ending soy stocks continue to grow. At mid-harvest, carryover stocks were estimated to be 885 million bushels, or a whopping 19 percent of production.

That means nearly 1 out of 5 bushels of American soybeans grown this year will still be in storage when next year’s harvest begins. Worse, while we sit on our growing hill of tariff-dinged beans, South American farmers are greasing planters to leap into the gaping hole we opened for them.

The USDA reckons 2019 South American soy plantings will balloon more than 10 percent to boost overall production to 7 billion bushels, or nearly 50 percent more than America’s 4.7 billion-bushel 2018 crop.

The Trump administration truly believes this mess is a result of “unfair retaliatory tariffs” by China when, in fact, China didn’t start this battle – the White House did. Economic claptrap about trade deficits and nonsense reviews about “the worst trade deals ever” might be fine for populist political campaigns, but they’re pure poison for on-the-ground governing.

Two years in, however, the claptrap continues. The White House now wants farmers and ranchers to forget about the current trade debacle it created and instead focus on forthcoming trade talks with Japan, the European Union and China.

Okay, but no dates for even one initial meeting – let alone timetables for definitive, detailed negotiations – have been set with any of these now-wary “partners.” As such, any new deal with anyone is likely years away.

But waiting isn’t an option for most farmers, because signs of where today’s farm and trade policy are taking American agriculture are beginning to appear, and most point south. Dead south, in fact.

On Oct. 19, the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City reported that “non-real estate farm loans” – that’s bank-speak for borrowed, day-to-day operating money – is now “30 percent higher than a year ago,” according to the National Survey of Terms of Lending to Farmers.

“This sharp growth in farm lending followed steady increases earlier in 2018,” notes the Kansas City Fed, “and represents the largest annual percentage increase in the third quarter since 2002.”

The report goes on to note two other prescient facts. First, the farmers taking out the loans are big operators: “(L)oans exceeding $1 million was a primary contributor to the increase …” and, despite the rise in lending, “… performance of agricultural banks across the country generally has remained solid.”

The first point isn’t good. If big-acreage farmers are already borrowing money at historic levels to stay afloat at this year’s prices, lower prices next year could be historically calamitous.

The second point is only marginally and, most likely, just temporarily better because of … well, the first point.

Meanwhile, Congress is as busy as a farm dog chasing its tail; it’s running in circles to pass a farm bill that holds nothing to address the storm brewing on the horizon.

 

The views and opinions expressed in this column are those of the author and not necessarily those of Farm World. Readers with questions or comments for Alan Guebert may write to him in care of this publication.

11/1/2018