HR-3982-119
Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, and in addition to the Committee on Agriculture, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by Julia Letlow (R-LA)
What it does
This bill would create the Tariff Response and Damages to Exports (TRADE) Fund inside the U.S. Treasury. The President would be authorized to deposit into the fund revenues collected from tariffs on imported agricultural products (those classified under Chapters 1–24 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule, covering live animals, animal and vegetable products, seafood, prepared foods, and beverages). The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) would then be required to use those funds to make payments to agricultural producers harmed by trade-related market disruptions — including losses from decreased exports, foreign tariff or non-tariff barriers, or increased production costs. USDA would also be required to report annually to Congress on fund activity. The fund and its authorities would expire on September 30, 2030, and any unspent money would be permanently rescinded at that date.
Who benefits
U.S. agricultural producers — including farmers, ranchers, and aquaculture operators — who experience income losses due to trade disputes, retaliatory foreign tariffs, or rising input costs tied to trade disruptions. Rural agricultural communities and farm-dependent local economies that would benefit from stabilized farm income. Agricultural lenders and suppliers whose customers' financial stability depends on farm revenue. Commodity traders and cooperatives that handle affected products.
Who is hurt
U.S. consumers and importers who pay tariffs on agricultural goods, whose tariff payments would fund the program rather than flow to general Treasury revenues. Domestic industries that compete with subsidized agricultural producers for labor and capital. Taxpayers broadly, if tariff revenues deposited into the fund would otherwise have reduced the federal deficit. Foreign agricultural exporters whose products are subject to the tariffs that generate the fund. Non-agricultural industries affected by trade disruptions who would receive no comparable relief mechanism.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that U.S. agricultural producers are uniquely vulnerable to trade disputes because foreign governments frequently target farm exports as retaliation in broader trade conflicts — a pattern documented during the 2018–2019 U.S.-China trade war, when American soybean, pork, and dairy exports dropped sharply and USDA distributed over $23 billion in emergency aid. They contend this bill creates a structured, self-funding mechanism that ties relief directly to tariff revenues generated by the same trade disputes that cause the harm, reducing reliance on ad hoc emergency appropriations and providing farmers with more predictable support.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that routing tariff revenues into a dedicated agricultural relief fund insulates farm subsidies from normal congressional appropriations oversight, effectively allowing the executive branch to direct billions in spending with limited legislative control. They contend that the program may entrench trade conflict by reducing the economic pressure on policymakers to resolve disputes quickly, and that prior USDA trade relief programs — such as the Market Facilitation Program — faced criticism from the Government Accountability Office for inconsistent payment distribution that favored larger farming operations over smaller ones.