Election 2020: Area farmers focused on trade and taxes in next president

Biofuel and migrant labor are also topics of interest

Members of the Ohio and Miami Valley agricultural community are waiting to see who will be the next president so they have a better idea of what trade and tax policies their businesses will be facing.

Agriculture is one of Ohio’s major industries and farmers and ag industry families are a key demographic for presidential candidates to win over. Farmers and rural America largely supported Donald Trump in 2016. Miami Valley farmers this week said the agricultural market has been volatile for years and they hope the next president will take an interest in their plights.

There are four major issues Ohio farmers are thinking about this presidential election: taxes, trade, biofuel and farm labor.

Which issue matters most to a farmer can depend on their industry and the size of their farm, among other factors.

Ben Brown, a professor of agriculture at Ohio State University, said farmers he’s spoken with are most concerned about biofuels if Trump wins and taxes if Biden wins.

Trade

“Agriculture is part of a global economy,” said Steve Berk, the farm manager at Dull Homestead in Brookville and a member of the Montgomery County Farm Bureau’s public policy committee. “Trade that is fair and competitive on a worldwide basis is something that is essential to the farmers of the United States.”

Trade is a topic that’s been in the news a lot over the last three years. Brown said both candidates have similar goals in “terms of final outcomes."

“They just have very different ways of getting there." he said. "Both talk very strongly about taking a strong stance against China.”

Over the last four years, the Trump administration has taken that stand unilaterally through tariffs. Biden has said he would work with blocs of allied countries to secure favorable international trade deals. Brown said Biden’s plan is similar to the approach the Barack Obama administration took to international trade.

Credit: Jordan Laird

Credit: Jordan Laird

Taxes

Tax policy can have an outsized effect on farmers because they often bring in a large income that is offset by large expenses, resulting in small take-home pay. Estate taxes can also become obstacles to farm succession, at times requiring tax payments on the value of farm operations valued at more than $11 million before they can be transferred to children. Taxes are often the issue most important to farmers, “no matter what” the candidate’s other agriculture-related policies are, Brown said.

Lou Brown, owner of Brownhaven Dairy in New Bremen, said farm succession is hugely important to Ohio farmers.

“We want to be able to pass our farms onto the next generation … and there’s got to be income for that next generation,” he said.

Ben Brown said “death taxes” on land and assets due at time of transfer can be “killer” for a lot of family farms.

The Trump administration’s tax cuts included a provision for a step-up in basis, essentially a benefit that reduces large capital gain taxes for inheritors.

If Biden is elected, Brown expects to see farmers hurrying to transfer assets to their children before the new president can sign a bill repealing step-up in basis.

Reversing what Trump did during his presidency, Biden also plans to increase taxes on corporations and anybody earning over $400,000.

“In agriculture, we deal with very large sums, so we tend to trigger those (taxes) fairly quickly but then we have the big expenses,” Brown said.

Brown said many Ohio farmers “are scared of what a Biden administration will do to their farm.”

Farm Labor

Ohioans involved in the dairy and some other agricultural industries said they need legal migrant labor to meet their needs.

Scott Higgins, CEO of the Ohio Dairy Producers Association, said it’s difficult to find American workers who want to work with cows.

“There are folks from other countries coming here that really love cows and working with cows so we need to make sure we have an immigration program that allows them to come ... and do it legally,” Higgins said.

Trump has made cracking down on immigration a pillar of his platform. However, when Trump issued an executive order in June suspending some temporary work visas that he said “present a risk to the U.S. labor market following the coronavirus outbreak,” he did not suspend H2-A visas, the kind used by temporary farm laborers.

Biden has expressed support for the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, a bill that could reform and expand the H-2A visa program and provide a path to legal residency to undocumented farmworkers. The latter issue is a nonstarter for some Republicans, which is why it has passed the House (attracting 23 Republican votes) but has not been brought up in the Senate.

Biofuel

Brad Reynolds, the director of communications for Ohio Corn & Wheat, said maintaining and increasing demand for ethanol fuel is “vitally important” to Ohio corn farmers.

There are federal rules requiring fuel sold in the U.S. to contain a minimum volume of renewable fuel, such as ethanol. The Trump administration roughly quadrupled the number of exemptions granted to oil and gas companies from those requirements. In January, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals struck down some of those exemptions.

In September, Trump’s EPA denied more than 50 retroactive waivers from the ethanol mandate requests. Farm and biofuel advocates have since urged the administration to do more to support biofuel, including releasing the renewable fuel requirements for 2021, which are normally set between June and September.

According to the Biden campaign website, Biden’s plan for rural America includes “promoting biofuels.” However, Brown said Biden’s campaign appears focused on supporting the advancement of electric vehicles.

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