Trump's Trials - Farmers will be hit hard by the dismantling of USAID
Episode Date: February 28, 2025A pause on the release of $2 billion in foreign aid could affect the government's longest-running permanent program for international food assistance — Food for Peace. Support NPR and hear every epi...sode sponsor-free with NPR+. Sign up at plus.npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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I'm Elsa Chang. Last night, Chief Justice John Roberts paused a lower court ruling that said
the Trump administration
must release about $2 billion in foreign aid while the court reviews the case.
This pause and the final decision could affect Food for Peace—that's the government's
longest-running permanent program for international food assistance.
It dates all the way back to the post-World War II period, when American farmers found
themselves with a surplus of grain.
President Eisenhower signed it into law in 1954.
In the interest of reinforcing peace
and well-being of free peoples throughout the world,
in short, using food for peace.
Food for peace is now part of USAID,
and with USAID's future tied up in litigation, the
program's future is in question.
And so too is the outlook for American farmers who benefit from the program.
Our colleagues, Waylon Wong and Erica Barris from the Indicator report.
In 2020, the federal government bought around $2 billion worth of food aid from American
farmers. These commodities were then distributed internationally.
That $2 billion represents less than a percent of the income farmers make from their crops.
Still, for some industries, the government purchases are crucial.
Michelle Erickson-Jones is a fourth generation farmer in Montana.
Michelle says USAID food assistance programs are vital to her state.
It's not like we're just giving this aid for the sake of giving dollars. We're also
building those relationships.
Michelle cites Japan and South Korea as examples of this policy working well.
These countries were some of the earliest recipients of food aid. Then as their economies
grew, they went from being recipients of donated food to being paying customers.
So the root of the program allows Montana to successfully export as much wheat as we do.
This deliberate effort to cultivate new markets was like a large scale international trade version of when you get a free sample of something at the grocery store and then decide to buy it.
The national security rationale for food aid is that people who get this American sponsored assistance are less likely to develop anti-U.S. sentiment.
And Michelle says to also think of food aid as a border strategy.
If people don't have to worry about going hungry, they're less likely to leave their home country and migrate to the U.S.
You know, there's this saying, like, you have 99 problems until, like, your one problem is food and then you have one. Michelle says it can be hard to make the case to farmers to support programs like USAID.
One reason for this is the supply chain that connects growers with the ultimate recipients of food assistance.
Typically, farms don't sell their crops directly to USAID.
Instead, they sell to a company like Cargill or Bungie.
So farmers might not even know that they're participating in a program like Food for Peace.
Michelle says loss of that revenue from the closure of USAID might not be immediately
felt.
But lawmakers in agriculture-heavy states are moving with urgency.
Kansas Senator Jerry Moran, along with several other lawmakers, has proposed a bill to move
Food for Peace from USAID to
the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
USDA has boots on the ground and the infrastructure already in place to support the logistics
for food assistance.
Moran says under the current system, foreign aid was being mismanaged.
He pointed to an example of a Syrian national who was accused of selling USAID food kits
on the black market to leaders of a terror organization. Jordan Skimmerhorn is one of the many contract
workers with USAID who was furloughed. She's skeptical whether USDA has the
right expertise and staffing in each country to distribute food aid. Still, she
believes some USAID programs will survive. Every senator wants to protect
USAID's investments in their state. Turns
out USAID funds a bunch of different things in a bunch of different states. We contacted
the State Department, which is now running USAID. We asked about the department's long-range
plans for the agency. We also asked what role Secretary of State Marco Rubio believes American
agriculture should play in food security and U.S. foreign policy.
A spokesperson told us via email that the State Department is reviewing foreign aid
and that, quote, programs that serve our nation's interests will continue.
However, programs that aren't aligned with our national interest will not, end quote.
Erika Barris, Weyland Wong, NPR News. Before we wrap up, a reminder, you can find more coverage of the incoming Trump administration
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