How to keep North Dakota farmers strong? Pass the USMCA

How to keep North Dakota farmers strong? Pass the USMCA
Former Senator Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND)
The Bismarck Tribune
August 11, 2019

No matter where you are in North Dakota, there’s a good chance you’re just around the corner from one of our state’s many cattle ranches or wheat fields. That’s because agriculture is the backbone of North Dakota, creating new opportunities in all corners of the state. Almost 90% of our land is used by farmers and ranchers and about a quarter of North Dakotans are employed by the agriculture industry.

The success of our agriculture industry is directly linked to our ability to engage in free, fair and enforceable trade with customers around the globe. To continue supporting North Dakota agriculture, our farmers and ranchers need trade agreements that match the reality of modern agriculture and the 21st century economy.

How do we ensure this growth is possible? Through smart trade policies that put the interests of our family farms, wheat growers, dairy producers, and ranchers first. Luckily for American agriculture, a new trade agreement with Canada and Mexico called the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, commonly referred to as the USMCA, will inject new growth into North Dakota’s economy.

In 2017, North Dakota businesses exported more than $5 billion worth of goods and services to Canada and Mexico. Congressional approval of the USMCA will empower North Dakota businesses to increase their exports and compete on a level playing field.

This new agreement provides much-needed updates to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), a 25-year-old trade agreement with Canada and Mexico. When it was enacted, NAFTA enabled North Dakota farmers and ranchers to reach new customers and more easily sell their crops, produce and meat to our North American neighbors. But that was a quarter of a century ago. It is time for an update.

Thanks to the USMCA, North Dakota’s agricultural products will no longer lose out to foreign competitors in these key markets because this new trade deal expands access into the Canadian and Mexican markets for our dairy, poultry, and wheat products. Now, North Dakota agriculture is poised to compete and win new customers in Canada, Mexico and around the world.

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