HR-5620-119
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Sponsored by Eric Crawford (R-AR)
What it does
This bill would direct the President to establish the Agricultural Trade Enforcement Task Force, staffed by employees from the USDA's Foreign Agricultural Service and the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. The task force would identify foreign trade barriers affecting U.S. agricultural exports that could be challenged under the World Trade Organization (WTO) or other trade agreements, develop enforcement strategies, and recruit allied trading partners to join in disputes. It would also be required to submit periodic reports to Congress, and its first report must include a plan to formally request WTO consultations challenging India's minimum price support policies for agricultural goods.
Who benefits
U.S. agricultural exporters — including large commodity producers of wheat, corn, soybeans, cotton, and dairy — who face foreign market access barriers. Farm workers and rural communities economically dependent on export markets. U.S. trading partners who share grievances against the same trade barriers and could join as co-complainants. Agricultural equipment manufacturers and input suppliers whose sales depend on farm sector profitability. The USDA and USTR, which would gain a formal coordination mechanism and additional institutional authority.
Who is hurt
Foreign governments — particularly India — whose agricultural subsidy and pricing policies would face formal WTO dispute challenges, potentially requiring costly policy changes. Foreign farmers who benefit from their governments' price support programs. U.S. taxpayers who would bear the administrative costs of staffing and operating the task force. Domestic food processors and importers who may benefit from lower-priced foreign agricultural goods that could be disrupted by trade disputes. Countries that may face diplomatic friction as a result of being named in WTO complaints.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that foreign trade barriers — including India's minimum price supports, which critics contend depress global commodity prices and disadvantage U.S. farmers — cost American agriculture billions in lost export revenue annually. They contend that a dedicated, coordinated enforcement task force fills a structural gap between the USDA and USTR, ensuring that trade agreement violations are systematically identified and challenged rather than addressed on an ad hoc basis. Proponents also argue that recruiting like-minded trading partners as co-complainants strengthens the credibility and leverage of WTO disputes, increasing the likelihood of successful outcomes for U.S. producers.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that directing the executive branch to file a specific WTO dispute against India — a major trading partner and geopolitical ally — through legislation risks escalating diplomatic tensions and constraining the President's flexibility to manage foreign policy through negotiation rather than litigation. They contend that the WTO dispute settlement system has been significantly weakened by the paralysis of its Appellate Body, making new filings a costly and uncertain tool. Critics also argue that the task force duplicates functions already performed by the USTR and USDA, adding bureaucratic overhead without meaningfully increasing enforcement capacity.