USDA Considering Economic Aid, Secretary Rollins Says

Sep 18, 2025

By Ryan Hanrahan

Reuters’ Leah Douglas reported that “the U.S. Department of Agriculture is working with Congress to evaluate whether economic aid might be needed for the nation’s farmers this autumn amid trade disputes and record-high yields, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said on Monday.”

“U.S. farmers have missed out on billions in soybean sales to China as stalled trade talks halt exports, and the USDA’s recent forecast of a record corn crop this autumn will likely weigh on a farm economy already saddled with low prices and rising fertilizer and seed costs,” Douglas reported. “Rollins pointed to inflation, high yields and the stalled talks with China as reasons for a year of projected losses for farmers.”

“‘We are working with our colleagues in Congress and closely monitoring markets daily to evaluate the amount of additional assistance that might be needed this fall,’ Rollins said at a conference of the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture in Rogers, Arkansas,” Douglas reported. “Rollins also said the USDA is reviewing fertilizer markets, ‘ranging from ensuring input suppliers are giving farmers a fair shake, to exploring options to provide relief.'”