A clamp-down on China's grain imports since last year has more to do with Chinese officials' anxiety about low grain prices than trade war posturing. Officials in China worry that low prices could undercut two of this year's goals for rural policy. Low prices could erode production incentives ahead of spring planting--resulting in a decline in grain output--and lead to a recurrence of rural poverty--which Xi Jinping claimed to have conquered 5 years ago.
An article last week in Farmers Daily--the communist party's mouthpiece on farm issues--described how Chinese authorities are coordinating a clamp-down on grain imports with domestic market interventions to boost grain prices. All the elements in the article matched paragraph 7 in the party's "Central Document No. 1" section on agricultural supply management without referring to the document.
Farmers Daily celebrated a sharp drop in grain imports that began last summer. After tailing off during the first half of 2024, China's corn imports fell abruptly in August-December to their lowest volumes in years. The cumulative 1.58 mmt of corn China imported during August to December 2024 was just a small fraction of the 13.4 mmt imported during the same months of 2023.
Source: analysis of Chinese Customs Administration data. |
China's wheat imports also dropped last August. Wheat imports were on a healthy pace of about 1.8-to-1.9 mmt per month during February-May 2024. Then imports dropped off during the June-August marketing season for China's winter wheat harvest and dropped even lower during August-December. Cumulative wheat imports during August-December 2024 were 68 percent less than their year-earlier volume.
Source: analysis of Chinese Customs Administration data. |
Farmers Daily predicted that the falling trend in wheat and corn imports will continue in the first quarter of 2025. The article cited USDA's downward revisions of its forecasts of China's grain imports over the last 3 months to support its prediction. Farmers Daily anticipates that China's grain market supply and demand will be tight, market price expectations will improve, and grain prices will continue to recover.
Weekly data from China's Administration of Food and Commodity Reserves |
Prices for domestically grown soybeans have followed a broadly similar path to the corn price. The decline in soybean prices began in 2022 and the decline in price after the 2024 soybean harvest was steeper. Domestic soybeans have also seen a modest rebound since February 2025.
Weekly data from China's Administration of Food and Commodity Reserves |
Farmers Daily cheered on the Chinese government's market interventions to deal with the "excessive decline in grain prices": enforcing minimum prices for rice and wheat and buying up corn and soybeans for government reserves.
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