Votewiser 119th Congress News Hub

Congress Member

Glenn Thompson

Republican

Pennsylvania state flag Pennsylvania

Latest Coverage

See all articles
Image for Thompson: Aid Package Will Account for Low Prices, not Just Export Losses
via: agriculture.com

Thompson: Aid Package Will Account for Low Prices, not Just Export Losses

House Agriculture Committee Chair Glenn “GT” Thompson expects the Trump administration’s forthcoming aid for struggling farmers will primarily address the slumping ag commodities prices, not just export losses from retaliatory tariffs.

“It’s a combination of not just tariffs, but just a really challenging farm economy,” Thompson told Agri-Pulse on Thursday. “Inflation has come down, but it’s still above average.”

On whether the administration is likely to consider current commodity prices or those from a month or more ago in calculating a payment formula, the Pennsylvania Republican said he’s “pretty confident it will reflect what people are going through right now.”

The Market Facilitation Program payments provided to farmers during the first Trump administration were largely calculated to compensate producers for the impact of export losses.

Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-S.D., said he’s still being briefed on how the farmer payments will be calculated. “What I want to do is make sure that the overall package is sufficient and fair,” he said.

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said Tuesday that the administration will make an announcement next week on further payments to farmers suffering from export losses.

Rollins has been insisting that the administration would unveil a package to support farmers affected by tariff retaliation and trade losses after the government reopened following the recent shutdown. The administration has also moved more than $10 billion from a fund previously used to fund tariff assistance to the secretary’s office.

A recent analysis by the American Farm Bureau Federation found that five of seven major crops are set to see larger average losses this year. The biggest losses were projected for cotton and rice at $370 and $364 per acre, respectively.