Don't count on so-called Trump "friend" Jean-Claude Juncker to somehow get the EU to buy boatloads of American soy. |
Actually, there are no tariffs being applied to the foodstuff already, hence there is no way of securing additional EU market access or purchases short of subsidizing them. Moreover, the EU isn't China where one guy from the Communist Party can order his minions to buy as much soy as necessary to appease Trump if the Reds felt like doing so. Last I checked, it was made up of 28 (soon-to-be 27) independent countries. Anyway....
But a mere handshake agreement to send more soybeans across the Atlantic won't make up for a reduction in exports across the Pacific.That brings me to another point unmentioned in the Reason blog post excerpted above: Most of the soybeans planted in the United States are genetically modified (GM). Think something on the order of 93%. While the US has been wanting to crack open the EU market for GM soy for the longest time, the EU has always been reluctant about doing so. Not only do they plant far less of the stuff--negligible quantities, really--European consumers generally disdain GM unlike the vast majority of indifferent American consumers. This case has been a long-running saga at the WTO. And because European consumers dislike GM foodstuffs, it's unsurprising EU regulations are quite stringent on their importation (e.g., labeling that these are indeed GM):
For starters, that's because the European Commission doesn't actually have authority over how many soybeans Europe imports. It doesn't procure soybeans for European markets and it doesn't tell European businesses where to buy their soybeans.
Of course, there are other ways that governments can encourage businesses within their borders to purchase materials from certain sources. Lowering trade barriers is one way to do it. If the Trump-Juncker agreement would lower European tariffs on American-grown soybeans, for example, that might do the trick of getting Europe to buy more American beans.
Except, well, the European Commission currently doesn't charge any tariffs on American soybeans. Which means European businesses already have access to all the American soybeans they would want. It's hard to see how—short of subsidizing demand across the pond—Juncker will follow through with his promise to have Europe buy more soybeans.
But soybeans intended for Chinese markets can’t necessarily be redirected to the European Union, which has stringent regulations on genetically modified foods.It is thus highly unlikely that all these GM soybeans meant for the Chinese market will now find a place in GM-hating Europe. It may be good for show when Trump glad-handed European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, but it's really hard to see how the EU becomes a replacement for lost sales to China when (a) it already can buy as much American soy as it needs tariff-free and (b) GM foods like soy are shunned by consumers in Europe.
According to a senior E.U. official, there have been no discussions about lifting those standards to purchase U.S. soybeans. The same official said that agricultural products were outside the talks between Juncker and Trump, directly contradicting comments from Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, who said Tuesday that “all agricultural products are something that will be discussed.”