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Trump clash with China imperils U.S. farmers
Los Angeles Times
|October 03, 2025
Soybean growers worry about survival because China hasn’t bought any in months.
MICHAEL CONROY Associated Press BRIAN WARPUP pauses during harvest on his farm in Warren, Ind. "We want to work," he says of farmers.
The leafy soybean plants in Magnolia, Ky., reach Caleb Ragland’s thighs and are ripe for harvest, but the farmer is deeply worried. He doesn’t know where he and others like him will sell their crop because China has stopped buying.
Beijing, which traditionally has snapped up at least a quarter of all soybeans grown in the U.S., is in effect boycotting them in retaliation for the high tariffs President Trump has imposed on Chinese goods and to strengthen its hand in negotiations over a new overall trade deal.
It has left American soybean farmers fretting over not only this year’s crop but the long-term viability of their businesses, built in part on China’s once-insatiable appetite for U.S. beans.
"This is a five-alarm fire for our industry," said Ragland, who leads the American Soybean Assn. trade group.
The situation might even be enough to test farmers’ loyalty to Trump, although the president still enjoys strong support throughout rural America. If no deal is reached soon, farmers hope the government will come through with aid as it did during Trump's first term, but they see that as only a temporary solution. Trump said recently he was considering an aid package.
U.S. and Chinese officials have held four rounds of trade talks between May and September, with another likely in the coming weeks. No progress on soybeans has been reported.
Political pressure is growing
Getting closer to harvest, “I'm honestly getting worried that the time is running out,” said Jim Sutter, chief executive of the U.S. Soybean Export Council.
After Trump imposed tariffs on Chinese goods, China responded with tariffs of its own, which now total up to 34% on U.S. soybeans. That makes soybeans from other countries cheaper.
This story is from the October 03, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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