The Wall Street Journal reporters have been getting quite the education in agriculture these days. Rarely does a week go by that there isn’t major coverage in the WSJ on this “dynamic” industry (how is that for a positive adjective?) we are in.
Pricing volatility, weather, interest rates, inflation, regulations and labor shortages, to name a few. Yet we sensed farmers would start to feel a lift late this winter when the USDA relief was to hit. And then the world changed, accounts were frozen and the alarms sounded. And they sounded again with President Trump’s tariff declarations on “Liberation Day” (April 2).
USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins and White House spokesperson Anna Kelly are saying what farmers want to hear, but the new relief packages won’t be developed until the impact is known later this fall, Rollins says. Farmers will need to leverage those relationships with their bankers until that time.
Wait ‘til the Dealin’s Done …
I’m maintaining a “line-item” approval (or disapproval) of our new administration’s first 11 weeks in office. I’ve told friends, family and any of the rest of you who’ll listen that you can’t “final-grade” a negotiation until it’s complete.
That is, a good poker player doesn’t answer to the color-commentors while still holding the cards. The “game” has not yet been settled.
No, we don’t know the President’s pursued result, and every day brings a new “play,” with additional concessions and deals sure to be come.
But a lot of brows are sweating these days, especially as the playing cards and the stakes rapidly rise. Even many of the “stay-the-course” GOP-leaning farmers are getting antsy; more than half said in a March AgWeb poll they can’t support their president’s use of tariffs as a bargaining tool.
A Triple Whammy
Farmers are taking it in the shorts — and from every corner. It’s a triple-whammy influencing the price of their crops, their inputs and equipment.
Not only does more than 20% of farmers’ income come from exports, says the American Farm Bureau Federation, but farmers will get hammered by the tariffs on machinery and implements (what equipment doesn’t have foreign-made product or technology on it?) as well as inputs like pesticides and fertilizers. And every sector who relies on farmers for a living is already feeling the waves of an immediate ripple effect.
One must work to keep confidence up. Bankruptcies and forced consolidations — throughout the ag ecosystem — were already knocking on the door at the end of 2024.
What History Says …
During President Trump’s first trade standoff, $27 billion of farm income disappeared, with $4 billion forever lost (the balance was met through relief programs).
Soybeans represented 71% of that lost income, as 60% of soybeans grown leave our borders as exports. As a result, China discovered it could satisfy its soy appetite via shipments from Brazil, which the U.S. has likely forever surrendered. Even so, China placed 34% tariffs on U.S. imports last week on what was left for our farmers to send into the Red Dragon.
Farmers — more than any other party — are in the crosshairs as a universal pawn in trade. You recall the self-descriptive words of the simpleton brute Alex Karras in Blazing Saddles: “Mongo only a pawn in game of life.”
Concerns Abound
My formative years in reporting (1992-2003) were focused on heavy manufacturing. Like President Trump, I too long for the manufacturing heydays of yesteryear.
Farmers — more than any other party — are in the crosshairs as a universal pawn in trade. You recall the self-descriptive words of the simpleton brute in Blazing Saddles: ‘Mongo only a pawn in game of life.’
What healthy industry did — for employment, the small communities surrounding the plant operations and the thousands of sub-suppliers — isn’t properly understood or valued by the average citizen. True and sustainable national wealth, as I was taught in my foundry days, is created only through one of three means — “you mine it, you grow it, or you manufacture it.”
Yet I don’t believe all the “hard industries” can or should return in their prior form, and I dare say that some work should remain in lower cost nations — except in cases where manufacturing capacity is needed for our national security. With the enormous labor-shortage ahead of us, we’ll need every available ounce of talent for the more advanced and value-added manufacturing opportunities that exist today.
So yes, I’m afraid Trump may be living in the past. Plus, there is the concern that if he has made a costly mistake —name a leader who hasn’t — will his own hubris allow him to make the necessary corrections? If he doesn’t trust economists on their odds of a full-blown recession, at least we know that the S&P plunge would’ve hit the family’s radar.
Earning Respect Again
A distant byproduct of all this could be for our country to agree that farmers’ sacrifice here, wanted or not, is deserving of note — and everyone’s respect. Maybe the realization that farmers are the “foot soldiers” of America of 2025 will quiet the armchair quarterbacks and their endless, so-called “expert” commentary on farm bill/subsidies, falsehoods about irresponsibility of farmers and, of course, their foolish definitions of those “#%@$! factory farms” that they like to spout off about.
Hopefully, that respect can also turn into a fair relief package that will be needed this year to stop the bloodletting on America’s farms.
Final Thoughts ...
I’ll leave you with a few thoughts on President Trump’s battle for equitable trade as well as the rampant — and incomprehensible — government waste.
First, the best way to avoid this painful series of DOGE events (and arguably the tariff overhaul) in the future is to be vigilant against waste and error occurring in the first place. Every dollar wasted is one that can’t be put toward a deserving use. And when things hit critical mass as they have in recent years, every worthy program — across every sector — is also at risk of being cut. Most now need to justify their existence to get going again.
It takes backbone, but we can say “no.” My former GOP governor here in Wisconsin, Scott Walker, did just that when he said no to $810 million in federal funding for a pork-laden railway program.
The best way to avoid this painful series of events is to be vigilant against waste and error occurring in the first place. Every dollar wasted is one that can’t be put toward a deserving use.
Second, I can’t resist a need — for all of us — to call B.S. on the increasing amount of misinformation spreading in this social media age, and the opposing “closed-ears” response to anything said about spending cuts. Returning control on certain programs to the states is actually a good thing, and can mean more resources for deserving causes. Attacking government waste, and supporting that which deserves support, should be a unifying — not a dividing — rallying cry.
Third, in normal times, we’d all be better off with more “ag folk” in politics. Iowa Republican Chuck Grassley is the only grain producer in the U.S. Senate.
“Real change takes disruption,” Rollins told the WSJ. “I’m talking to farmers every single day. They know the president has their back.”
I hope she’s right, and hope that the President is listening to her as well.
What do you see? What am I missing here? Use the comment field below to weigh in with your take on the situation...
April 18, 2025 Update: The Wall Street Journal today reported some optimism for Ag. While WSJ reported that exports to China are a small slice of a $29 trillion GDP, economist Neil Shearing said “if you’re a soybean grower, that is just about the biggest issue going at the moment.” It also reported a commitment from USDA’s Brooke Rollins that farmers would be bailed out if hurt by the president’s trade war … Yet another article focused on trading partners’ eagerness to buy. “In Thailand it’s corn feed, while Europe has suggested it could boost soybean purchases … In recent days, Thailand, Vietnam and Malaysia have told grain producers that they might buy from the U.S. to help their countries lower their trade imbalances and negotiate a better tariff deal, said Gustavo Idigoras, head of a group that represents Argentina’s biggest grain processors and exporters..” The article also reported concessions in “prying open certain markets for U.S. agricultural goods” could be coming from lower-income nations that cannot otherwise load up on U.S. goods. -- Mike Lessiter