Trump to announce $12B in economic assistance for farmers



WASHINGTON — President Trump on Monday is expected to announce $12 billion in economic assistance for Us farmers grappling with the effects of ongoing trade negotiations with China and others, according to White House officials.

As much as $11 billion will come from a new Department of Agriculture program providing bridge payments to farmers of corn, cotton, sorghum, soybean, rice, cattle, wheat, potato and other row crops.

The Farmer Bridge Assistance program is meant to help the farmers “recover from years of unjustified trade actions on American agricultural goods by foreign governments, accumulated inflation costs under the previous administration and other market disruptions,” a White House official said.

President Trump on Monday is expected to announce $12 billion in economic assistance for US farmers. Bloomberg via Getty Images

“Payments will provide certainty to farmers as they market this year’s harvest and plan for next year’s crops,” the source said.

Another $1 billion will be set aside for crop producers not covered by the program. The pending announcement was first reported by Bloomberg.

Trump will be joined by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins and other members of Congress for a White House event to announce the funding.

The bailout comes amid the president’s trade war with China, which has affected US farm exports. AP

The bailout comes amid the president’s trade wars — particularly those involving exports to China — and as farmers are expected to be $28 billion in the red for the 2025-26 crop year, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation. The figure is up from $17 billion the previous year.

In terms of one crucial crop, soybeans, the US exports almost half of its production annually, while China usually takes around one-quarter of the total 29 million metric tons of what’s exported every year. But ongoing talks with Beijing stalled purchases and caused price fluctuations.

Chapter 12 farm bankruptcies spiked 60% in the first half of this year when compared with 2024. AFP via Getty Images

The other half of US soybean production is processed for livestock feed, various cooking oils and biofuels such as diesel.

Chapter 12 farm bankruptcies spiked 60% in the first half of this year when compared with 2024, The Wall Street Journal reported.



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