Ross gets earful on Trump tariffs
Story Date: 6/22/2018

 

Source: POLITICO'S MORNING AGRICULTURE, 6/21/18

Finance Committee senators blasted Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross on Wednesday for the damage done to the U.S. agricultural sector by foreign retaliation to the administration's steel and aluminum tariffs. American farmers "are bearing the brunt of retaliation for these actions," Chairman Orrin Hatch said during the hearing. "I just don't see how the damage posed on all of these sectors could possibly advance our national security."

Warnings about economic harm: Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) cited complaints from Oregon potato growers and Pacific Northwest cherry growers "who have got nearly 1.5 million boxes of cherries ready to ship to China. They're worried those cherries are going to end up stuck on the dock or rotting in a warehouse due to China's retaliation,"

Not buying national security line: Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) noted that market volatility can also make it more expensive for companies to invest in commodities to balance out the risk of other holdings. "I wish we would stop invoking national security because that's not what this is about," Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) said. "This is about economic nationalism."

The goal is more free trade: Ross said the administration has "no control over what another country does in retaliation," but argued the president's most recent threat to impose tariffs on another $200 billion in Chinese products was designed to discourage further escalation. The administration's aim, he said, is to have more free trade — not less. "The president's objective is not to end up with high tariffs, and his objective is not to end up in a trade war," Ross said. "His objective is to get to a lowering of barriers, both tariffs and non-tariff ones, and to protect intellectual property. ... The purpose of this is to get to an endgame that is much closer to free trade than what we've been before."

What about farmers? But Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) blasted Ross for not articulating a vision of how agricultural producers would be protected. "I don't think you're going to have any backstop for our farmers and ranchers, and to blindly pursue these policies without considering what happens to them I think is a huge mistake," he said.

Grassley wants nothing to do with handouts: Sen. Chuck Grassley had told reporters during his weekly ag briefing Monday that Trump pointed to Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue before telling a group of governors and congressional lawmakers that the federal government would subsidize any losses faced by farmers due to tariffs. "That's not what my farmers in Iowa want — help from the federal treasury," Grassley responded. He reiterated his displeasure about the idea to Ross at the hearing.

























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