Gov’t aid boosts U.S. farm income

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Published: December 12, 2019

CHICAGO, Ill. (Reuters) — Nearly one-third of projected U.S. net farm income this year will come from government aid and taxpayer-subsidized commodity insurance payments, according to a forecast issued Nov. 27 by the United States Department of Agriculture.

The USDA increased its net farm income forecast for 2019 by more than 10 percent, to US$92.5 billion, driven largely by President Donald Trump’s decision to issue aid payments to farmers hurt by trade disputes and federal insurance indemnities from extreme weather events, USDA Economic Research Service senior economist Carrie Litkowski said in a conference call with reporters.

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Without those payments, U.S. net farm income this year would have dropped by nearly eight percent to $63.6 billion.

Total direct payments to the nation’s estimated two million farms are expected to surge to $22.4 billion this year, a 64 percent increase over 2018 and the highest rate paid out since 2005, Litkowski said.

Farm income also was boosted by an estimated $6.5 billion paid out in federal commodity insurance indemnities, which does not include the premiums that farmers paid themselves, she said. That includes crop insurance payments Midwestern farmers received in the wake of record floods that devastated a wide swath of the farm belt this spring.

Farmers have struggled to stay afloat as the trade war with top U.S. soybean buyer China drags on, and the U.S. Congress has not yet ratified the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA).

The Trump administration has pledged as much as $28 billion in two separate trade aid rounds. The bulk of the aid is in the form of direct support payments to U.S. farmers to compensate for lower prices for farm goods and lost sales stemming from trade disputes.

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