With rural America starting to see huge financial losses from tariff policies, Trump offers vague aid package to farmers in the heartland

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By Sasha Rogelberg
September 25, 2025


President Donald Trump is pledging to use tariff revenue to bail out farmers reeling from the impact of the ongoing trade war.

Farmers—a historically loyal constituency of Trump’s—have sounded the alarms about how the administration’s tariffs exacerbated trade disputes that have endangered U.S. export markets as production costs remain stubbornly high or even increase.


“The frustration is overwhelming,” the American Soybean Association (ASA) President Caleb Ragland said in a statement on Wednesday. “The farm economy is suffering while our competitors supplant the United States in the biggest soybean import market in the world.”

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on X on Wednesday the U.S. would provide financial support to Argentina as it tries to stabilize its economy. As part of its stabilization efforts, Argentina eliminated its export tax on soybeans, and China reportedly ordered 10 cargoes of the crop from the South America country. China received nearly a quarter of the U.S. soybean exports in 2024, but has not ordered any U.S. soybeans since May. The country has instead turned to cheaper alternatives from Argentina and Brazil, which have continued to gobble up market share from the U.S. over the last decade.

The National Corn Growers Association has been similarly distraught, with corn prices plunging more than 50% from their 2022 peak while production costs have decreased by only 3% in the same timespan. Corn and soybeans accounted for 45% of the U.S.’s cash crop receipts in 2024, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Meanwhile, input costs for production continue to eke up. August data from the North Dakota State University Agricultural Trade Monitor indicates tariffs rates for self-propelled machines like tractors are at 15%, while rates for herbicides and some pesticides are at 25% as a result of ongoing trade disputes.


Trump’s trade war deja vu

Trump’s previous actions to bail out farmers have seen mixed success. Many of the problems plaguing U.S. farmers today are a redux of the issues that arose in the president’s first term.

U.S. farmers lost $27 billion in agricultural exports between mid-2018 and 2019 as a result of a trade war with China, according to a 2022 report from the USDA. The first Trump administration responded to the crisis with a $28 billion bailout for farmers, effectively erasing the immediate economic losses. But the market erosion from the initial trade war is lasting, farmers and economists said.



Continue:

 
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Just wait till all those “high paying manufacturing jobs” magically come back to the US.

Then you’ll see.
 
So let me get this straight.
Trump gets into a trade war with China.
China stops buying American crops.
Argentine farmers fill the gap, screwing US farmers out of billions.
Trump then sends $20 billion to help out Argentina's economy.
How is this winning?
What am I missing?

=====

This photo shows the Treasury Secretary reading a text from the Agriculture Secretary.
She's worried China has outmaneuvered the US by buying up Argentine soybeans at the expense of our farmers, even as the Administration plans to bail out Argentina with billions of dollars.

 
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So let me get this straight.
Trump gets into a trade war with China.
China stops buying American crops.
Argentine farmers fill the gap, screwing US farmers out of billions.
Trump then sends $20 billion to help out Argentina's economy.
How is this winning?
What am I missing?

He's missing the part about Trump also using our tax payer dollars for a $28 billion bailout for farmers.
 
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Ive never taken a dime of gov farm monies, Nor would I. Todays bean prices down .03 cents to 10.08 about. Estimated break even price was estimated at 11.60 to 12.50. My property taxes increased just over 20 percent ea yr past two. Corn is so far off I wouldnt list it. Youd need 30 percent more to break even, only 25 percent for beans
 
So let me get this straight.
Trump gets into a trade war with China.
China stops buying American crops.
Argentine farmers fill the gap, screwing US farmers out of billions.
Trump then sends $20 billion to help out Argentina's economy.
How is this winning?
What am I missing?

=====

This photo shows the Treasury Secretary reading a text from the Agriculture Secretary.
She's worried China has outmaneuvered the US by buying up Argentine soybeans at the expense of our farmers, even as the Administration plans to bail out Argentina with billions of dollars.




Since the tarrifs on liberation day the economy has been BOOMING



U.S. GDP expanded at a strong 3.8% pace in second-quarter revision

 
He's missing the part about Trump also using our tax payer dollars for a $28 billion bailout for farmers.

That was 2020.

China didn't even buy that much in soybeans last year they bought $12.6 Billion in U.S. Soybeans last year.

So the cost isn't necessarily going to be 28 billion for soy beans China didnt buy from US farmers.

All while tarriffs are bringing in trillions in investments in the United States.

GDP grew at 3.8% after liberation day tarrifs.
 
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