As President Donald Trump announced a $12 billion farm aid package this week to help U.S. farmers hurt by tariffs, he placed responsibility for the U.S. agricultural trade deficit on former President Joe Biden.
But in casting blame elsewhere, he is ignoring other factors, including his own role. Currently, farmers — especially those that produce soybeans and sorghum — have had a hard time selling their crops while getting hit by increasing costs after Trump raised tariffs on China earlier this year as part of a broader trade war that has contributed to the deficit.
Experts say that it is a massive oversimplification to blame any one administration or policy.
Here's a closer look at the facts.
CLAIM: There was an agricultural trade surplus during Trump's first term that former Biden turned into an agricultural trade deficit.
THE FACTS: This is both misleading and missing context. It is true that there was an agricultural trade surplus when Trump entered the White House in 2017, which has since become a significant deficit. However, according to experts, this can be attributed to actions taken by both administrations, as well as factors outside their control such as the COVID-19 pandemic.
''I don't want to let U.S. trade policy off the hook here, but it's one element of a broader, more complicated kind of story,'' said Cullen Hendrix, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Still, Trump held Biden solely responsible for the agricultural trade deficit at a White House roundtable Monday where he announced the farm aid package.