WATCH: Pritzker not confident Trump can solve soybean trade deal with China
(The Center Square) – With shipments of soybeans last month to China dropping to zero for the first time since November 2018, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker is sounding the alarm.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture shows no outstanding sales of soybeans to China for the week ending Sept. 18. Last year at the same time, China bought more than 6,500,000 metric tons. Illinois is the largest producer of soybeans in the U.S.
Friday, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker explained what the impact of China not buying soybeans means, if it persists.
“We’re talking about I believe more than $12 billion of sales from Illinois soybean farmers that normally would be sold to China if there were regular trade going on, it’s not something special,” Pritzker told reporters.
Meeting with Australia’s prime minister Monday, President Donald Trump said he wants to get China to buy more soybeans from the U.S.
“They stopped buying our soybeans because they thought that was punishment, and it is punishment to our farmers, but we’re not going to let that happen,” Trump said.
Trump said his tariffs on China are sending a message.
“It’s probably nicer. Saying you’re going to pay 158-157% tariff is a nicer way of saying that ‘we don’t want to do business with you,’” Trump said. “And if they don’t do business with us, I think China is in big trouble.”
Pritzker said if a deal isn’t struck, the impact could be $12 billion in lost sales to Illinois’ agriculture economy.
“That’s just what it would be this year if not for the tariffs and the war, the tariff war that has ensued from this administration so there isn’t a solution to this,” Pritzker said.
Trump said he’s aiming to get China to buy soybeans as they used to and will be meeting with Chinese leadership in the weeks ahead.
Latest News Stories
Illinois quick hits: Madigan disbarred; taxpayers subsidize medical debt relief
Audit Confirms Utility Losses as Casey Council Approves First Property Tax Hike in Five Years
Reshoring manufacturing will take a more skilled workforce, small manufacturers say
WATCH: Feds take steps to dismantle ED, states respond
Inflation-adjusted teacher salaries drop despite record spending on public education
State officials race clock amid legal changes to gerrymandered maps
Illinois quick hits: CDC’s autism and vaccines website criticized by IDPH
Federal judge orders halt to National Guard deployment in DC
Consumer group files amicus brief on behalf of NRA’s petition to Supreme Court
Report links Minnesota welfare fraud to terrorist funding
White House denies Trump wants to execute ‘seditious’ Dem lawmakers
IL GOP U.S. Senate candidate says state needs balanced representation