Washington Insider -- Friday

Europe and Administration Tariffs

Here’s a quick monitor of Washington farm and trade policy issues from DTN’s well-placed observer.

Biofuel Group Sues to Force EPA to Use Tougher Small Refiner Waiver Criteria

EPA would be forced to return to using criteria that it used prior to 2017 in granting small refiner exemptions under the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS), with the Advanced Biofuels Association (ABFA) arguing the broader criteria used by the agency is negatively impacting the industry.

"We want to return to normalcy," ABFA President Michael McAdams told Reuters in the wake of his group filing suit in the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington. "My members will continue to suffer irreparable harm unless the EPA changes its ways." EPA has maintained it is living up to terms of a U.S. Appeals Court ruling in 2017, which found the agency had been too narrow in its criteria on small refiner waivers.

ABFA contends EPA has changed its process of assessing the requests, making it easier for refineries owned by major oil companies to get the waivers. ABFA wants the court to order EPA not to grant any waivers for the 2018 compliance year until a decision is made in a suit the group filed challenging the 2017 waivers. The group charges that EPA granted waivers to refiners that the government believed would have remained competitive and profitable if they complied with the RFS in 24 out of 48 recent cases.

Under the RFS, refiners with capacity of 75,000 barrels per day or less can apply for waivers of their RFS obligations if they can show meeting those requirements would create undue hardship. EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler has cautioned that he will continue to grant the hardship waivers as that is required by law under the RFS.


USDA Adjusts Some Food Product Price Forecasts

USDA still forecasts food prices overall will increase 1.5% to 2.5% in 2019, up from the 1.4% increase registered in 2018, but still below the 20-year average of 2.3%. Food at home prices (grocery store) are seen rising 0.5% to 1.5%, well above the 0.4% rise seen in 2018.

The 2018 rise in grocery store prices was the first in three years and the 2019 forecast is well above the 2% 20-year average.

USDA did make upward revisions to its forecasts for fats and oils, now forecasting those prices to decline 2% to 1% in 2019 versus their prior forecast those prices would fall 2% to 3%.

Fruit and vegetable prices are now forecast to increase 0.5% to 1.5%, up from a prior outlook those prices would be steady to 1% higher.

P[L1] D[0x0] M[300x250] OOP[F] ADUNIT[] T[]

USDA did revise down its forecast for egg prices, now expecting them to fall 3% to 2%. That compares with their month-ago outlook that egg prices would fall 2% to 1%.

As for prices for food away from home (restaurants), USDA expect those to increase 2% to 3% in 2019, in line with the 20-year average of 2.7% and the 2018 increase of 2.6%.


Washington Insider: Europe and Administration Tariffs

Amid press reports that the U.S.-China talks are close to bearing fruit, the New York Times is reporting that European studies are suggesting that tariffs on Europeans are not having as much impact as formerly expected.

For example, President Trump’s trade war was supposed to make Europeans feel so much pain they would beg for mercy at the negotiating table, NYT says. “But it’s not working very well, according to a new study by the European Central Bank.”

Almost a year after the White House imposed tariffs on European steel and aluminum, the actual damage to European exports has been surprisingly mild. Some industries, notably manufacturers of heavy equipment, may have even profited “because the White House imposed a broader array of tariffs on Chinese products, making competing European goods less expensive by comparison and allowing them to gain market share,” the Times says.

The tariffs “pose only a modest adverse risk to the global and euro area outlooks,” the economists at the European Central Bank reported. The new study, which comes as Europe and the United States prepare to begin high-level trade talks, reinforces other research showing that the tariffs on European goods have, by themselves, not amounted to very much. “They have probably hurt the United States economy more than the intended targets,” the European report says.

One reason is that much of the steel that Europeans sell to the United States is especially formulated for specific uses like aircraft parts or oil drilling equipment. American companies sometimes cannot find domestic suppliers able to provide the same products, which often contain patented combinations of minerals or other metals. So, they simply wind up paying the tariffs of 10% on aluminum and 25% on steel and passing the extra cost on to American consumers.

“There was not necessarily a lot of production capacity in the U.S. to pick up the slack,” said Oliver Rakau, chief German economist at Oxford Economics, who was not involved in the central bank study.

At the same time, the trade war is having a significant psychological impact, the Times says. The administration has rattled European confidence with the tariffs and the U.S. threats to expand them to include cars. Fearful of what may come next, businesspeople are delaying plans to expand their factories or hire new workers. “Uncertainty related to protectionism is weighing on economic sentiment,” the central bank study said, adding that was only one of the reasons for Europe’s tepid growth.

Many economists have said that putting tariffs on cars would raise the stakes significantly and cause a lot more damage.

As part of the new study, which appears in the European Central Bank’s monthly bulletin, Gunnella and Quaglietti also calculated what would happen if the United States imposed 10 % tariffs on imports from all countries and if all of the countries hit by the tariffs retaliated in kind.

The United States economy would suffer the most damage in such a trade war because American products would become more expensive abroad, the central bank economists estimated. China would come out ahead.

In Europe, the damage to business confidence in the hypothetical trade war would largely be canceled out by increases in exports to countries other than the United States. European companies would be able to take market share from their American rivals in China.

There are already signs that European manufacturers of factory machinery, construction vehicles and other heavy equipment are exploiting the administration’s trade war with China. Industrial machinery is Germany’s second-biggest category of exports after cars and an important sector in countries like the Netherlands and Italy.

In recent years, Chinese companies have become more skilled at producing sophisticated machinery and challenging the dominance of European rivals. But White House tariffs on Chinese products have given the European companies at least a temporary price advantage.

Still, few business managers are feeling good about the turmoil. “Further trade conflicts would not be in our interest,” Trumpf, a German company known for machines that use lasers to cut steel, said. The United States and China are Trump’s two biggest foreign markets and it has factories in both countries, the company noted.

There has long been U.S. discussion and debate about the administration’s basic trade objectives, especially its focus on trade balances limited to goods—and its willingness to intervene in markets with tariffs and other tools that can significantly roil long established markets including those for ag products. The China debate widened the fight to include pressure for structural changes that included the role of government — and which had wider political support in the United States, but which are extremely difficult to enforce.

The debate with Europe is still in early stages while the U.S.-China fight appears to be closer to resolution, but the politics involved in the deals being considered — including the new NAFTA — are often murky and complicated, especially as they involve the Congress and its reviews. These are debates producers should watch closely as they intensify, Washington Insider believes.


Want to keep up with events in Washington and elsewhere throughout the day? See DTN Top Stories, our frequently updated summary of news developments of interest to producers. You can find DTN Top Stories in DTN Ag News, which is on the Main Menu on classic DTN products and on the News and Analysis Menu of DTN’s Professional and Producer products. DTN Top Stories is also on the home page and news home page of online.dtn.com. Subscribers of MyDTN.com should check out the US Ag Policy, US Farm Bill and DTN Ag News sections on their News Homepage.

If you have questions for DTN Washington Insider, please email edit@dtn.com

(GH\SK)

P[] D[728x170] M[320x75] OOP[F] ADUNIT[] T[]
P[L2] D[728x90] M[320x50] OOP[F] ADUNIT[] T[]
P[R1] D[300x250] M[300x250] OOP[F] ADUNIT[] T[]
P[R2] D[300x600] M[320x50] OOP[F] ADUNIT[] T[]