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Farmer-assistance program detailed

Key Takeaways

• Depressed commodity prices, inflated input costs and ongoing market uncertainty have many farmers facing another year of negative or near-break-even returns.

• The Trump administration’s $12 billion in economic assistance for farmers provides timely relief as farmers prepare for the 2026 planting season. But it does not fully cover farmer losses during the past few years. Of the $12 billion, $11 billion is allocated for the Farmer Bridge Assistance Program, which will deliver support to row-crop farmers. It will help offset a portion of projected 2025 losses and provide cash-flow assistance.

• The remaining $1 billion has been set aside for specialty crops and sugar growers, but additional information on a timeline, eligibility and how payments will be calculated has not been released.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has announced $12 billion to provide one-time economic aid to farmers facing financial losses during the 2025 crop year. Of that total, $11 billion is directed to row-crop producers in the Farmer Bridge Assistance Program. The remaining $1 billion is reserved for specialty crops and sugar assistance, though the USDA has indicated that additional data collection and analysis are needed to determine how those payments will be structured and distributed.

Even after accounting for crop-insurance indemnities and prior ad hoc assistance, the agricultural sector continues to experience multi-billion-dollar losses each year. The Farmer Bridge Assistance Program is a needed step toward easing financial strain in the farm economy. But it’s not expected to cover the full extent of row-crop losses during this prolonged period of inflated costs, depressed crop prices and weak margins. And the $1 billion allocated for specialty crops falls short of addressing the total losses that specialty-crop producers are facing.

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