Too Far Gone? Why U.S. Agriculture Industry Is In Dire Straits

 | Oct 11, 2019 12:23PM ET

The ongoing trade dispute between the US and China has held the world’s attention for well over a year now.

This political battle of world powers has major implications on the global economy, but the US is already feeling market pressures. Back and forth retaliatory tariff hikes continue to put dents in US export figures - especially those of the agricultural industry.

From 1995 to 2017, US agricultural exports grew from $56.2 billion to $140.5 billion - a healthy 150% increase. As output outpaced domestic demand, US farmers and agricultural businesses leaned on export markets to maintain growth. However, in mid-2018, after China hit US agricultural products with a 25% duty - exports began to plunge.

US agricultural exports grew a meager 1% from 2017 to 2018 - driven by a 53% year-over-year decline in exports to China.

Despite recent trade talks and tariff exemption lists, the path forward is still somewhat hazy. Current policies are driving uncertainty around the US’s ability to consistently deliver as an exporter - leading importers to diversify their crop/food sources as a safeguard.

And US suppliers are dealing with the consequences.