成人X站

MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Counties that favored Trump hit hardest by budding trade war

Jun 29, 2018, 5:00 AM | Updated: 7:45 am

trade war, Ritzville...

The Washington counties that most heavily favored Donald Trump in 2016 would feel the deepest economic bite of the president’s proposed China trade dispute, state and federal data shows.

The top five crop-producing counties in Washington — Grant, Yakima Benton, Franklin, and Walla Walla — produced more than $6 billion in sales last year. Much of it was in products such as apples, wheat, and hay that are targeted for the retaliatory tariffs in response to the president’s trade sanctions against China.

These are also the counties which supported the president over his opponent by an average margin of 18 percent — among the highest levels of support in the state.

By contrast, the counties which strongly favored his presidential opponent Hillary Clinton (King, Pierce, Snohomish) at this point bear much less of the weight of the possible trade war — with Boeing being a possible exception. But economists and airplane manufacturing experts have struggled to quantify the extent and cost of China’s threatened aircraft tariff.

RELATED: A lot at stake for Boeing as US-China trade tensions escalate

This isn’t the case with cherries, for example. Washington state farmers sold approximately $99 million in cherries and $17 million worth of apples to China in 2016, according to state and federal agricultural data. Farmers in Eastern Washington also sold $150 million in wheat and hay combined.

Of the state’s top 10 agricultural exports — products ranging from apples to fresh seafood to frozen french fries — China ranks as a top five buyer worldwide in every product but one. In total, China buys between $120 and $200 million in Washington agricultural products annually.

Trade war and Washington farmers

Grant County Commissioner Cindy Carter, whose family farms cherries, apples and other crops near Royal City, said the threat of a trade wars is deeply worrisome to people in her county where the economic diversity is measured by type of crop, not type of industry. She agreed that its unfortunate the counties who stood behind the president are disproportionately feeling the weight of the trade dispute.

“It feels like we are getting penalized (by federal policies),” Carter said. “We could get hit pretty hard with the tariffs. And its not just that; there is the labor issues, too.”

In an escalating war of words, the president has asked聽the worth of Chinese products to target with tariffs. China has responded in kind, targeting U.S. goods from apples to airplanes.

Carter said she loves farming and would not trade it for anything else. But the possibility of a trade war coupled with the tightening of the farm labor pool that began with the Obama administration and continued into the Trump administration has made business difficult.

“We’re now paying better than $20 an hour to pick cherries,” she said. “This is not a minimum wage job.”

But keeping workers has proven difficult in recent months. And, she pointed out, it’s not like the cherries can just sit.

“You basically pay what people ask, now. When you lose labor for a crop, sometimes it means you lose the crop.”

MyNorthwest News

This shooting scene at 1st Ave. S. & S. Dakota was the first of two homicides in Seattle SODO Distr...

Tom Brock

Two deadly shootings, two hours apart, in Seattle’s SODO District

Seattle Police detectives are investigating two murders in Seattle's Sodo district that apparently happened within a couple of hours of each other early Sunday morning.

15 hours ago

The Kent-headquartered company known as Blue Origin launched a crypto billionaire and five other pe...

Tom Brock

Blue Origin launches 34th New Shepard rocket into space

Jeff Bezos's Kent-based rocket technology company Blue Origin launched a crypto billionaire and five others into space Sunday morning.

17 hours ago

driverless cars (1)...

Julia Dallas

Seattle gears up for driverless cars

As Seattle gets ready for driverless cars, a working group with the transportation department presented their findings.

22 hours ago

university place...

Shawn Garrett, 成人X站 7

Towing attempt gone wrong: SUV rolls into University Place restaurant twice

A vehicle crashed twice into a University Place restaurant early Wednesday morning.

22 hours ago

Amazon (4)...

Julia Dallas

Amazon cites AI for Q2 profit jump

Amazon saw an increase in profits in Q2 compared to 2024.

23 hours ago

Andrew Tate Chicago (Photo: Andrew Tate)...

MyNorthwest Staff

Rep. Baumgartner pays tribute to Spokane hall of famer Ryne Sandberg

Washington Congressman Michael Baumgartner paid tribute this week to Ryne Sandberg, the Spokane native and Hall of Fame second baseman.

23 hours ago

Counties that favored Trump hit hardest by budding trade war