S-2456-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
What it does
This bill would give the U.S. and Foreign Commercial Service statutory authority to establish one National Rural Export Center and up to nine regional rural export centers. These centers would provide rural businesses with customized market research, strategic planning, and export support services. The centers would also be required to maintain public websites with effectiveness data, best practices for businesses new to exporting, and staff contact information.
Who benefits
Rural small and medium-sized businesses seeking to sell products in foreign markets, particularly those without the resources to conduct international market research on their own. Agricultural producers, manufacturers, and artisan goods makers in rural areas would be direct beneficiaries. Rural communities and local economies that depend on these businesses could see indirect economic benefits. Foreign buyers seeking U.S. rural products may also benefit from a more organized point of contact.
Who is hurt
Private export consulting firms and trade advisors that currently serve rural businesses could face reduced demand if free government services displace their paid services. Taxpayers would bear the cost of establishing and operating up to ten centers. Urban-based businesses seeking similar export assistance would not be eligible for these specialized services, potentially creating an uneven playing field in access to federal trade support resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that rural businesses are systematically underserved by existing federal export programs, which are concentrated in urban commercial hubs, leaving rural producers without the specialized guidance needed to compete in global markets. They contend that expanding exports from rural areas would diversify local economies, reduce dependence on domestic market fluctuations, and create jobs — outcomes that existing private-sector resources have not delivered at scale for rural communities.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the federal government already operates the U.S. Export Assistance Center network and the Small Business Administration's export programs, making new rural-specific centers potentially duplicative and an inefficient use of taxpayer funds. They contend that market research and export planning are services the private sector already provides, and that subsidizing these services through a new government bureaucracy may crowd out existing private providers without demonstrably improving export outcomes for rural businesses.