Economists question necessity of farm bailout, say tariffs don’t help

Spread the love

The Trump administration last week announced it would be giving about $12 billion in direct cash assistance to American farmers, similar to how it assisted farmers in 2018 – only, its stated reasons for doing so are different.

At a roundtable, Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins said Biden-era policies had plunged farmers into “one crisis after another” and the new Farmer Bridge Assistance program was meant to transport them from a tumultuous present to a more prosperous future.

“This bridge is absolutely necessary, based on where we are right now,” Rollins said. “[This is] the bridge that is needed to get from the last administration and what basically happened under the last president… to this new golden age for farmers.”

The first Trump administration also provided American farmers with a bailout of $12 billion in taxpayer dollars, only that time, it said the disbursement was needed as a temporary buffer while the administration worked out better trade deals. The bailout was described as “a short-term relief strategy to protect agricultural producers while the Administration works on free, fair, and reciprocal trade deals to open more markets,” according to a Department of Agriculture press release at the time.

Even though President Donald Trump has brought a renewed intensity to tariff and trade policy in 2025, the farm economy is in a different place, according to senior research fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute, Joseph Glauber – which could account for the difference in messaging.

In 2018, when the first supplemental aid package was announced, the farm economy had endured more sustained losses.

“Back in 2018 you really did see some big trade losses… and they were sustained, right? They lasted a year and a half, or almost two years,” Glauber said.

But American farmers have received a lot of supplemental aid since 2018, in addition to that first payout.

Farmers received additional financial assistance during the COVID-19 pandemic, as did most segments of the American economy, amounting to about $57.7 billion in 2020 alone, according to a USDA working paper.

“We find $57.7 billion in total financial assistance was provided to farm operations and households in calendar year 2020,” the paper reads. “Programs specifically designed to address the economic impacts of COVID-19 in 2020 delivered an estimated $35.2 billion, the assistance provided under non-COVID-19 related programs (other than net indemnity payments) delivered an estimated $16.8 billion, and the net indemnity payments provided the remaining $5.7 billion.”

The Agriculture Department is also given broad authority under the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act to issue discretionary agricultural support payments of up to $30 billion per year, in addition to the regular funding, insurance and disaster assistance provided by the Farm Bill. (Congress can also authorize more if needed.) The Act was passed in 1933 as an emergency relief measure to help farmers during the Great Depression. Like many other New Deal programs such as Social Security, it remains in effect today.

As a result of these additional disbursements in recent years and shifts in global food markets, the American farm economy overall is in a better position, according to Glauber.

“If you concentrate on farm income, which is the big, big number that includes both livestock and crop producers, that’s pretty good and is higher than the 10-year average,” Glauber told The Center Square. “By a lot of measures like that, it’s pretty good.”

Glauber said land values, too, would likely reflect signs of a crisis if the farm sector was, in fact, facing a crisis that most American farmers “haven’t seen in their lifetime,” as Rollins described it.

“If the farm sector were in a serious downturn, you would think that land values would be falling. They haven’t been. They’ve actually been holding fairly firm,” Glauber said.

Crop farmers have been hurt by recent government policy, but because of the infusion of supplemental assistance the sector has seen since 2018, they likely suffered worse during the recession in 2009 or in the 1980s when they didn’t have that kind of assistance, according to Glauber.

Ryan Young, senior economist with the Competitive Enterprise Institute, said much of the damage that has been done to the farm sector comes from tariffs both from Trump’s first and second terms – and former President Joe Biden could have improved things for farmers if he had undone some of them.

“Two wrongs don’t make a right. That’s the main point. President Trump’s tariffs got farmers in this mess in the first place. The solution is to remove the tariffs, not to try covering up that mistake with a taxpayer-funded bailout,” Young told The Center Square.

Tad DeHaven, policy analyst with the Cato Institute, called attributing farmers’ current challenges to the Biden administration “laughable” due to the fact that the Trump administration’s choice mirrors the bailout in the president’s first term, before Biden had been president.

“Certainly the Biden administration was responsible for a good part of the inflation that we went through,” DeHaven told The Center Square. “The first Trump administration initiated a trade war and they lost. Farmers lost market access. They got a bailout.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Tyler Farr_5048

Tyler Farr Rocks Casey, Takes a Seat Atop World’s Largest Chair

CASEY, IL – Country music star Tyler Farr brought his chart-topping hits and down-to-earth charm to Casey this weekend, delivering a memorable headlining performance at the Casey Popcorn Festival on...
Bessie, provided by the Stan Keeney family, paces the squares while everyone anxiously awaits, hoping she’ll stop on their square. —photo by Sharon Durham

Keeney Family Donates to Bessie Bingo

Bessie, provided by the Stan Keeney family, paces the squares while everyone anxiously awaits, hoping she’ll stop on their square. —photo by Sharon Durham
Lauren Repp was the winner of the Casey Rotary annual Bessie Bingo fundraiser. Lauren (right) received the $1,000 donation from Casey Rotary Club President Marcy Mumford (left). Also pictured is Rotarian Jay Markwell. —photo by Sharon Durham

Bessie Bingo Winner

Lauren Repp was the winner of the Casey Rotary annual Bessie Bingo fundraiser. Lauren (right) received the $1,000 donation from Casey Rotary Club President Marcy Mumford (left). Also pictured is...
Rotararians at work! Pictured (l to r) are Gary Shore, Jay Markwell, and Aaron Stinson. —photo by Sharon Durham

Rotararians at work!

Rotararians at work! Pictured (l to r) are Gary Shore, Jay Markwell, and Aaron Stinson. —photo by Sharon Durham
Section 8 covers Colorado rents up to $3,879 per month, 'lap of luxury'

Section 8 covers Colorado rents up to $3,879 per month, ‘lap of luxury’

By Kenneth SchruppThe Center Square Taxpayers are covering rents of up to $3,879 per month in Colorado, leading taxpayer advocates to question the growing duration of federal Section 8 housing...
House Oversight Committee releases trove of Epstein documents

House Oversight Committee releases trove of Epstein documents

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square More than 33,000 pages related to the Jeffrey Epstein case have been released by the U.S. Department of Justice after the House Committee on Oversight...
WATCH: Trump says 'we’re going in' as Pritzker pushes for money instead of troops

WATCH: Trump says ‘we’re going in’ as Pritzker pushes for money instead of troops

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – President Donald Trump has promised to send federal crime-fighting help to Chicago, but Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker...

WATCH: Trump to push Supreme Court for quick ruling on tariff authority

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump said Tuesday that his administration will ask the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday to quickly take up his appeal on tariff authority...
Newsom seeks to regain control of rest of National Guard

Newsom seeks to regain control of rest of National Guard

By Dave MasonThe Center Square California Gov. Gavin Newsom is seeking another courtroom victory against President Donald Trump after a federal judge Tuesday ruled in Newsom’s favor over the National...
GOP scrutinizing litigation group that 'educated' 2,000+ judges on climate change

GOP scrutinizing litigation group that ‘educated’ 2,000+ judges on climate change

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee have launched a probe into the Environmental Law Institute over allegations the group has tried to influence the impartiality...
Routh, representing himself, begins picking Florida jury Monday

Routh, representing himself, begins picking Florida jury Monday

By Alan WootenThe Center Square Ryan Routh will have court-appointed lawyers nearby as he represents himself in a Florida court against charges related to assassinating Donald Trump. Jury selection starts...
SPACECOM will leave Colorado for Alabama’s Rocket City

SPACECOM will leave Colorado for Alabama’s Rocket City

By Alan WootenThe Center Square U.S. Space Command Headquarters will move to Alabama from Colorado. Calling Huntsville by its beloved “Rocket City” nickname, second-term Republican President Donald Trump reversed yet...
Trump administration releases AmeriCorps funding

Trump administration releases AmeriCorps funding

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square The White House Office of Management and Budget will release over $184 million in paused funding for AmeriCorps service programs. This comes after a coalition...
Illinois quick hits: DOJ sues over financial support for illegal aliens; state opposes proposed labor rule change

Illinois quick hits: DOJ sues over financial support for illegal aliens; state opposes proposed labor rule change

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square DOJ sues over financial support for illegal aliens The U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District...
WATCH: Chicago residents: 'We need help' from feds to fight crime

WATCH: Chicago residents: ‘We need help’ from feds to fight crime

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – As the Illinois Freedom Caucus and Chicago Flips Red join forces to invite President Donald Trump’s crime...