麻豆中文字幕丨欧美一级免费在线观看丨国产成人无码av在线播放无广告丨国产第一毛片丨国产视频观看丨七妺福利精品导航大全丨国产亚洲精品自在久久vr丨国产成人在线看丨国产超碰人人模人人爽人人喊丨欧美色图激情小说丨欧美中文字幕在线播放丨老少交欧美另类丨色香蕉在线丨美女大黄网站丨蜜臀av性久久久久蜜臀aⅴ麻豆丨欧美亚洲国产精品久久蜜芽直播丨久久99日韩国产精品久久99丨亚洲黄色免费看丨极品少妇xxx丨国产美女极度色诱视频www

U.S. pro-free trade agricultural group disproves Trump's trade policy

Source: Xinhua| 2018-08-21 12:03:35|Editor: ZD
Video PlayerClose

LOS ANGELES, Aug. 20 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. agricultural sector will not be a winner in trade with China due to President Donald Trump's "terrible move," according to a U.S. pro-free trade agricultural group on Monday.

The voice was heard at a round-table discussion last week in the city of Bakersfield, central California, said Farmers for Free Trade (FFT), a leading agricultural trade lobby group in the United States, in a report published on its official Tweeter page.

The trade war with China and other important trade partners ignited by the White House was a "terrible move for agriculture," Brian Kuehl, executive director of the free trade organization, was quoted by the report as saying.

"He (Trump) called our trade with China a bad deal," Kuehl said. "We in agriculture knew that wasn't true. U.S. agriculture wins every time, every year."

Trump's move to address the so-called overall trade imbalance has U.S. agriculture in a tailspin, he added.

Harmeet Dhindsa, purchasing manager for the Bakersfield-based exporter Infinity 8 International Trade LLC, explained the bad situation at the meeting from a ground-floor perspective.

He said that last year his company shipped 10,000 11-pound (4.1-kg) cartons of cherries and 76,410 50-pound (18.5-kg) cartons of Valencia oranges to buyers in Shanghai, China, but this year merely 240 cartons and 3,240 cartons respectively.

Those losses may never fully be recouped, Dhindsa said, explaining that even if U.S. farmers could approach China market later, China had started to consume more domestic product or bought products from other countries such as Egypt, South Africa and Spain.

Owing to the tariff war, the trade loss for 10 commodities alone -- almonds, pecans, pistachios, walnuts, apples, oranges, raisins, sour cherries, sweet cherries and table grapes -- totalled 2.64 billion U.S. dollars per year, according to a new study by the Agricultural Issues Center and Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at UC Davis.

The loss from diverting those commodities to alternative markets amounts to 3.34 billion dollars per year, the study said.?

TOP STORIES
EDITOR’S CHOICE
MOST VIEWED
EXPLORE XINHUANET
010020070750000000000000011100001374068981