U. S. Agricultural Exports

U. S. Agricultural Exports
Author: Amber Reid
Publisher:
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2015
Genre: BUSINESS & ECONOMICS
ISBN: 9781634836784

Trade, particularly exports, is critical to the vitality of American agriculture. On average, foreign markets absorb about one-fifth of U.S. agricultural production, thus contributing significantly to the health of the farm economy. The positive economic effects of trade in farm products are felt well beyond the farm gate. Farm product exports make up about 10% of total U.S. exports and contribute positively to the U.S. balance of trade. The economic benefits of agricultural exports also extend across rural communities, while overseas farm sales help to buoy a wide array of industries linked to agriculture, including transportation, processing, and farm input suppliers. Moreover, most of the future growth in food demand is expected to occur in developing countries. This book discusses major agricultural trade issues in the 114th Congress, as well as provides the reader with a background and issues of agricultural exports and the 2014 Farm Bill programs. It concludes with alternative policies to agricultural export taxes that are less market distorting.

Sources of Recent Changes in U.S. Agricultural Exports

Sources of Recent Changes in U.S. Agricultural Exports
Author: John Dunmore
Publisher:
Total Pages: 64
Release: 1984
Genre: Agricultural prices
ISBN:

Extract: This report describes changes in U.S. agricultural exports from 1980/81 to 1982/83 and assigns some order of direction and magnitude to the principal sources of change in three major U.S. farm commodity exports: wheat, coarse grains, and soybeans. Factors studied include: exchange rates, ocean freight rates, foreign economic growth, foreign production, foreign indebtedness, population growth, and policy factors. Some factors--declining ocean freight rates, economic growth, and population growth--stimulated U.S. farm exports. Other factors, such as foreign production of some commodities, foreign indebtedness, the stronger dollar, and certain policy actions had negative impacts on the direction and magnitude of U.S. trade in farm products.