Froma Harrop -Grand Forks Herald, February 18, 2018
Rick: "I emphasized a few sections that are especially
relevant to our region where corn, wheat and soybeans rely on a strong
international market."
Our generally strong economy
has yet to cast its blessings on American farm country. Incomes there are
headed for their lowest level since 2006. And farmers are going deep into debt
to keep their heads above water.
President Trump's budget
blueprint would only make things worse for U.S. agriculture. Trump's
hostility to trade deals has already inflicted damage on an economic sector
highly dependent on exports. And that's on top of his
deficit-exploding tax bill and cranked-up federal spending, sure to make
borrowing still more expensive.
U.S. farmers have been buffeted
by the bumper crops of corn and soybeans. The worldwide grain glut has hammered
prices. Russia and Brazil, meanwhile, are taking market share from American
grain producers. (Small wonder the Russians love Trump.)
The budget would do several things that
would further hurt the farm economy. The obvious one would be to chop $47
billion from the federal crop insurance and other farm programs over 10 years.
Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., said
Trump had personally promised him not to cut crop insurance. Trump not keeping
his sacred word? Imagine our surprise.
The Northern Ag Network reports
that some farmers think agriculture has been disproportionately targeted in the
budget cuts. "When you look at the agriculture in the scheme of things of
the overall federal budget," North Dakota Agriculture Commissioner Doug
Goehring complained, "we are decimal dust."
The budget plan contains other
spending reductions that could do considerable harm to farmers. One would cut
what used to be called the food stamp program by 30 percent. Contrary to a
common belief, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program was not designed
to be a free ride for lazy poor people. Most of the recipients are low-income
workers, many trying to feed children. Others are disabled or elderly.
The food stamp program is
important to farmers for political reasons. Farm bills pass thanks to a
coalition of representatives from rural and urban areas. The more numerous
urban reps would see little value in passing expensive bills serving farm
country were it not for the food stamps that help their poor constituents.
Trump's plan would take SNAP benefits away from 4 million people.
As Barry Flinchbaugh, veteran
ag economist at Kansas State, recently told a convention of grain growers in
Manhattan, Kansas: "If food stamps are taken out, it will be the last farm
bill. The urban Congress won't support a crop program without food
stamps."
Side note to liberals: Please
ignore the stupid food box idea cooked up by Trump's Agriculture Department.
"America's Harvest Box" would be a government-selected carton of
edibles that would replace cash to buy food. It was created to drive liberals
crazy. Don't fall for the distraction.
The budget's proposed slashing
of State Department funding by 23 percent is another bad omen for farm country.
America's diplomats devote over a third of their communications pushing U.S.
exports, according to one analysis.
With Trump pulling the U.S. out of the
Trans-Pacific Partnership and threatening the North American Free Trade
Agreement, America's farmers and ranchers are going to need all the support
from Washington they can get.
Flinchbaugh considered TPP the most
lucrative deal for farmers in his lifetime. By rejecting it, he said, "the
president has played right into the hands of the Chinese." Losing markets in Canada and especially
Mexico would be devastating.
"I've been predicting ag
policy for 50 years," Flinchbaugh noted. "It's never been more
difficult than under this administration."
The strange reality is that
good, hardworking farm people helped elect the man currently dismantling their
economy. They might spend less time watching Fox News herald the magnificence
of Donald J. Trump and more time weighing their own economic interests. How is
it they became such an easy sacrifice?
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