Boosting Trade

Boosting Trade

Tim Hammerich
Tim Hammerich
News Reporter
This is Tim Hammerich of the Ag Information Network with your Farm of the Future Report.

Major U.S. agriculture organizations sent letters to all 2024 presidential candidates asking them to prioritize trade. The letters encourage each candidate to prioritize new market access trade agreements to help strengthen U.S. ag and decrease reliance on China. Farmers for Free Trade executive director Brian Kuehl says the U.S. has stood on the sidelines in world trade long enough.

Kuehl… “We're certainly still trading. But you know, the U.S. is going to run into a food and ag trade deficit this year of nearly $18 billion, a historic high in terms of how much more we're importing than exporting. And some of that is year-round produce that's coming in at its high cost. I get that. But part of it is it's been ten years since the U.S. entered into a new free trade agreement. So, we've updated NAFTA and we've updated South Korea, but it's been ten years since we broke into a new country.”

While the U.S. has been inactive in looking for new trade opportunities, Kuehl says other countries have been busy.

Kuehl… “In the past ten years, China has entered into dozens of free trade agreements, and the EU entering into free trade agreements. Our allies and our adversaries alike are opening new markets. And the U.S. because of, I think, frankly, politics on both the left and the right, we've got scared of trade agreements, and so we're not playing anymore.”

Kuehl says his group wants to see America take the USMCA template and try to open up some new markets

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