Updates to our Terms of Use

We are updating our Terms of Use. Please carefully review the updated Terms before proceeding to our website.

Tuesday, April 23, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Skepticism Reigns About China’s Supposed US Farm Purchases

From Beijing to America's farm belt, skeptics are questioning just how much U.S. farm goods China has actually committed to buy — and whether U.S. farmers will be able anytime soon to export goods there in the outsize quantities about which President Trump has boasted.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — President Donald Trump likes to joke that America's farmers have a nice problem on their hands: They're going to need bigger tractors to keep up with surging Chinese demand for their soybeans and other agricultural goods under a preliminary deal between the world's two largest economies.

But will they really?

From Beijing to America's farm belt, skeptics are questioning just how much China has actually committed to buy — and whether U.S. farmers would be able anytime soon to export goods there in the outsize quantities about which Trump has boasted.

It amounts to $40 billion a year, according to Trump's trade representative, Robert Lighthizer. If you ask the president himself, though, the total is actually "much more than'' $50 billion.

U.S. farm exports to China have never topped $26 billion in any one year.

What's more, since Trump's trade war with Beijing erupted last year, China has increased its farm purchases from Brazil, Argentina and other countries. As a result, Beijing may be locked into contracts it couldn't break even if it intended to increase its purchases of U.S. agricultural goods to something approximating $40 billion.

"History has never been even close to that level," said Chad Hart, an agricultural economist at Iowa State University. "There's no clear path to get us there in one year."

"The figure of $40 billion is larger than I expected," added Cui Fan, a trade specialist at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing, "and I wonder whether the United States can ensure the full supply of the products."

U.S. farmers would surely like to. The farm belt has endured much of the impact from Beijing's retaliatory tariffs since July 2018, when Trump imposed taxes on $360 billion in Chinese imports. Beijing struck back by taxing $120 billion in U.S. exports, including soybeans and other farm goods that are vital to many of Trump's rural supporters.

The impact from China's retaliatory tariffs was substantial: U.S. farm exports to China, which hit a record $25.9 billion in 2012, plummeted last year to $9.1 billion. Soybean exports to China fell even more — to a 12-year low of $3.1 billion, according to the Department of Agriculture. Farm imports to China have rebounded somewhat this year but remain well below pre-trade-war levels.

The so-called Phase 1 deal that the two sides announced Dec. 13 did manage to de-escalate the standoff and offer at least a respite to U.S. farmers. Yet the truce put off the toughest and most complex issue at the heart of the trade war: The Trump administration's assertion that Beijing cheats in its drive to achieve global supremacy in advanced technologies such as driverless cars and artificial intelligence.

The administration alleges — and independent analysts generally agree — that China steals technology, forces foreign companies to reveal trade secrets, unfairly subsidizes its own firms and throws up bureaucratic hurdles for foreign rivals.

Beijing rejects the accusations and claims that the United States is trying to suppress a rising competitor in international trade.

Under the preliminary U.S.-China deal, Trump suspended his plan to impose new tariffs and reduced some taxes on Chinese imports. In return, Lighthizer said, China agreed to buy $40 billion a year in U.S. farm exports over two years, among other things. Beijing also committed to ending its longstanding practice of pressuring foreign companies to hand over their technology as a condition of gaining access to the Chinese market.

ADVERTISEMENT

Many farmers say they're hopeful but restrained in their expectations.

"At this point, we have to wait to see more details," said Jeff Jorgensen, who farms about 3,000 acres in southwest Iowa.

The Trump administration has released no text of an agreement. A fact sheet that Lighthizer's office issued did not specify the target for increased Chinese farm purchases. What's more, Beijing has declined to confirm the $40 billion figure.

"After the agreement is officially signed, the contents of the agreement will be announced to the public," said Gao Feng, a spokesman for the Commerce Ministry,

Still, Chinese imports of U.S. soybeans more than doubled in November after the Phase 1 agreement was announced in mid-October — a sign that reduced tensions might have begun to ease the strain on U.S. farmers, according to AWeb.com, a news website that serves China's farming industry.

Beijing insists that its farm purchases will be based on consumer demand and market prices, pointedly implying that it won't buy more than it needs just to satisfy the Trump administration.

"The purchases should be based on market principles," said Tu Xinquan, director of the China Institute for WTO Studies in Beijing. "The United States should compete with other countries through price and quality."

Some analysts suggest that it's at least theoretically possible for the United States to boost its farm exports to China to something close to the figures the administration has promised. Flora Zhu, associate director of China corporate research at Fitch Ratings, calls the $40 billion "achievable.''

She says, for example, that China's demand for soybeans amounts to $40 billion a year. Even before the trade war, the United States supplied about one-third of that total, suggesting, Zhu said, that "there is still large room for China to increase its purchases of soybeans from the U.S."

In addition, China's demand for imported pork has intensified because its own pig herds have been ravaged by an outbreak of African swine fever. Yet that same outbreak could reduce China's need for American soybeans: Fewer hogs could mean less demand for soybeans and other sources of feed.

But achieving $40 billion a year would require diverting market share away from other countries — Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, New Zealand — that export sizable quantities of farm goods to China. Those nations could then argue to the World Trade Organization that they are losing exports not because they can't compete but because China is being coerced into buying American to avoid Trump's tariffs.

"It is a situation many countries are concerned about,'' said Tu of the WTO studies institute in Beijing.

U.S. farmers sound wary. Some worry that the prolonged trade war will brand the United States an unreliable trade partner in China and jeopardize access to a vast Chinese market that had increased its purchases of U.S. farm products from less than $1 billion a year in the early 1990s to nearly $26 billion by 2012. U.S. farm exports to China then fluctuated between about $20 billion to $25 billion a year before Trump's trade war erupted last year.

Farmers have watched with frustration as breakthroughs in the trade war appeared several times to have been achieved only to collapse soon thereafter.

"I think it's a lot of false promises again," said Bob Kuylen, who grows wheat and sunflowers and raises cattle near South Heart, North Dakota. "I'd love to see $50 billion, but I don't think it will ever happen. ... It's just almost an impossible thing, so why even say it?"

Categories / Economy, International

Subscribe to Closing Arguments

Sign up for new weekly newsletter Closing Arguments to get the latest about ongoing trials, major litigation and hot cases and rulings in courthouses around the U.S. and the world.

Loading...