MORE: Local manufacturing CEO named to national board
Jennifer Coleman, a spokeswoman for the Ohio council, said Wednesday morning her organization plans to put out a detailed statement on the tariffs in a couple of hours.
“I think farmers are very concerned, and that kind of sums up their reaction right now,” she said. “China is our No. 1 customer by far.”
“It should surprise no one that China immediately retaliated against our most important exports, including soybeans,” American Soybean Association President and Iowa farmer John Heisdorffer said in that organization’s statement. “We have been warning the administration and members of Congress that this would happen since the prospect for tariffs was raised. That unfortunately doesn’t lend any comfort to the hundreds of thousands of soybean farmers who will be affected by these tariffs.”
MORE: Dying on the job. 164 Ohioans killed
The Chinese action came after the Trump administration announced an imposition of tariffs of 25 percent on Chinese products worth $50 billion, national media reported.
While the Trump plan would affect 1,300 categories of goods, China is targeting a narrower range of 106 types of U.S. goods, “many of them high-profile,” the Wall Street Journal said. Soybeans and smaller commercial passenger planes, mostly made by Boeing Co., are the most valuable U.S. exports to China, worth nearly $23 billion last year, the Journal said.
About the Author