It turns out Republicans could get more stringent work requirements added to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program after all. The USDA is changing requirements for states to issue waivers on SNAP benefits. Politico says it’s not a coincidence that the announcement came out on the same day that President Trump is expected to sign the new farm bill. As the current law is written, able-bodied adults without dependents can’t get SNAP benefits for more than three months during a three-year period. To get more benefits from the program, those able-bodied adults have to be working or enrolled in an education or training program for 80 hours a month. However, states are allowed to waive those requirements when unemployment spikes or there aren’t enough jobs available. USDA issued a proposed rule that would tighten the requirements states have to meet in order to issue those waivers. An estimated 755,000 of those able-bodied adults would lose SNAP benefits over three years if the proposal is implemented. USDA says the plan should save up to $15 billion over a decade.
Author: Agriculture News
Trump Signs Farm Bill, Won’t Sign Stopgap Funding Bill
President Donald Trump signed the 2018 Farm Bill on Thursday during a White House ceremony. The five-year bill sets agriculture policy and reauthorizes farm, conservation, nutrition, rural development, agricultural trade, as well as many other programs. The legislation also removes hemp from the Controlled Substances Act, which legalizes hemp production. The Minneapolis Star Tribune says the signing is good news for farmers, who have been buffeted on all sides by trade wars, low commodity prices, and generally uncertain futures. However, the question is whether those reauthorized programs will actually have funding available. A short-term spending bill has made its way through Congress this week, and initially, Trump said he would sign it to keep government funded until February. A CBS News report says Speaker of House Paul Ryan met with the president and then made the announcement that Trump will not sign it. The president wants funding for a border wall between the U.S. and Mexico, which the Senate bill does not have. Ryan tells reporters,” We want to keep the government open but we also have legitimate concerns about securing our border.”
Thursday’s Closing Grain Bids
December 20th, 2018
St Joseph |
|
Yellow Corn |
3.58 |
White Corn |
no bid |
Soybeans |
8.28 – 8.39 |
LifeLine Foods |
3.65 |
|
|
|
Atchison |
|
Yellow Corn |
3.66 – 3.67 |
Soybeans |
8.38 |
Hard Wheat |
4.59 |
Soft Wheat |
4.68 |
|
|
|
Kansas City Truck Bids |
|
Yellow Corn |
3.65 – 3.67 |
White Corn |
3.75 – 3.83 |
Soybeans |
8.59 |
Hard Wheat |
5.20 |
Soft Wheat |
4.94 – 4.99 |
Sorghum |
5.90 |
For more information, contact the 680 KFEQ Farm Department.
816-233-8881.
Food Labels Impact Consumer Habits
Nutritional information on packaged foods encourage healthier eating and can change consumer habits, according to a new study by the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University. The study assessed the effectiveness of multiple types of food labels and found that these approaches can impact some targets, but not others, for both consumer and industry behavior.
The study reviewed two million unique observations, including consumer reported dietary intakes, purchases, and sales receipts. The research found label information reduces consumer intake of calories by 6.6 percent, fat by 10.6 percent, and other unhealthy food options by 13 percent. Labeling also increased consumers’ vegetable consumption by 13.5 percent.
In contrast, labeling did not significantly impact consumer intakes of other targets such as total carbohydrate, total protein, saturated fat, fruits, whole grains, or other healthy options.
Livestock Antibiotic Use Down 33 Percent
Antibiotics use in livestock dropped 33 percent between 2016 and 2017, according to data from the Food and Drug Administration. The FDA’s 2017 Summary Report on Antimicrobials Sold or Distributed for Use in Food-Producing Animals documents the decline.
The report also found domestic sales and distribution of all medically important antimicrobials decreased 41 percent since 2015 and decreased 28 percent since the first year of reported sales in 2009. While sales data do not necessarily reflect actual antimicrobial use, the reduction in sales volume observed in 2016 and 2017 is an indicator that ongoing efforts to support antimicrobial stewardship are having a significant impact, according to the FDA.
The federal watchdog says optimizing how antimicrobial drugs are used and limiting their use to only when necessary to treat, control, or prevent disease will help to preserve the effectiveness of these drugs for fighting disease in both humans and animals.
China Buying More U.S. Soybeans
China has bought a second round of U.S. soybeans this month, the first purchases of U.S. soybeans by China since the beginning of a tit-for-tat trade war. The Department of Agriculture announced exporters sold 1.1 million metric tons to China for delivery by August 31st.
The sales follow a trade war cease-fire to allow the U.S. and China to discuss a trade agreement of some sort by March of 2019. China is the largest buyer of U.S. soybeans, but halted purchases after implementing a 25 percent tariff on U.S. soybeans in retaliation to U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods.
China had pledged to begin purchasing U.S. agricultural products following a meeting with President Trump at the G20 Summit. Meanwhile, Trump is reportedly seeking to meet with China in January to further advance trade talks.
Wednesday’s Closing Grain Bids
December 19th, 2018
St Joseph |
|
Yellow Corn |
3.65 |
White Corn |
no bid |
Soybeans |
8.35 – 8.45 |
LifeLine Foods |
3.69 |
|
|
|
Atchison |
|
Yellow Corn |
3.73 |
Soybeans |
8.45 |
Hard Wheat |
4.58 |
Soft Wheat |
4.67 |
|
|
|
Kansas City Truck Bids |
|
Yellow Corn |
3.72 – 3.74 |
White Corn |
3.82 – 3.85 |
Soybeans |
8.65 |
Hard Wheat |
5.19 |
Soft Wheat |
4.93 – 4.98 |
Sorghum |
6.01 |
For more information, contact the 680 KFEQ Farm Department.
816-233-8881.
NCGA: Trade Aid Comes up Short
The National Corn Growers Association says the second round of trade aid payments provide virtually no relief. The payments, released by the White House Monday, sets the payment rate for corn at just one cent per bushel, despite the fact that corn farmers have suffered an average 44 cent per bushel loss since tariffs were first announced, according to NCGA. President Lynn Chrisp says, “One cent per bushel is woefully inadequate to even begin to cover the losses.” The payments stem from the Department of Agriculture’s Market Facilitation Program. The first round of payments was authorized earlier this fall. In a November 19 letter to USDA Secretary Perdue, Chrisp stressed the disappointment around USDA’s approach to calculating MFP payments. Many farmers, according to NCGA, felt it was too narrow in scope and did not capture real-time impacts of trade disruptions.
Farm Groups Push for Ag in EU Trade Talks
A coalition of agriculture groups is asking the Trump administration to keep pushing agriculture issues in the European Union-U.S. trade talks. In a letter sent to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, 53 organizations, led by the National Pork Producers Council, urged the Trump administration “to continue stressing” that only a “truly comprehensive agreement will be acceptable.”
The EU has expressed reluctance to include agriculture as it did during earlier negotiations on the U.S.-EU Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, knowing it would require lifting import barriers that protect EU farmers and removing regulatory measures that are scientifically unjustified or overly restrictive.
Because of the EU’s barriers, the United States had a trade deficit in food and agricultural goods of nearly $11 billion last year. That deficit was $1.8 billion in 2000. NPPC President Jim Heimerl says he and others expect the Trump administration “to require the EU to negotiate on agriculture and to eliminate all tariff and non-tariff barriers to U.S. pork and other agricultural products.”
Former China Banking Officials Says U.S., China, Agreement Possible
A former central bank official in China is optimistic the U.S. and China can reach an agreement by the March deadline that will “pave the way for future talks.” The South China Morning Post reports Zhu Min, the deputy governor of the People’s Bank of China from 2009 to 2010, expects it would take at least six months to a year before the two countries could resolve their trade conflict.
The official said China was willing to make compromises needed to address some U.S. concerns and to work to reduce the trade imbalance. But he also expressed concern over Washington’s rivalry with Beijing beyond trade, and the unpredictability of the U.S. president.
China began buying U.S. ag products last week as part of the ceasefire agreement between the U.S. and China. Agriculture remains hopeful more purchases are planned.