Trump Turns His Attention To Taxing Indian Rice Imports
WASHINGTON, DC – President Donald Trump unveiled a multi-billion-dollar farm relief package while sharpening his criticism of agricultural imports from India and other Asian suppliers, telling a White House roundtable that tariffs would be used aggressively to protect American producers.
Opening the session with farmers, lawmakers, and top cabinet officials, Trump said the administration would direct “$12 billion in economic assistance to American farmers,” funded by tariff revenues the US is collecting from trading partners. “We’re really taking in trillions of dollars, if you think about it,” he said, adding that countries “took advantage of us like nobody’s ever seen.”
The President framed the new assistance as essential to stabilizing the farm economy after what he repeatedly called inherited inflation and depressed commodity prices. “Farmers are an indispensable national asset, part of the backbone of America,” he said, arguing that tariff leverage was central to his strategy for reviving US agriculture.
India surfaced prominently as an example during a lengthy discussion on rice imports, which one Louisiana producer described as devastating for southern growers.
Meryl Kennedy, CEO of Kennedy Rice Mill, told the President that the US market was being hit by “countries… dumping rice into this country today,” adding: “The tariffs are working, but we need to double down.” She listed “India, Thailand, [and] China into Puerto Rico” as major sources of subsidized imports and said the trend was undermining domestic producers. “We’ve never seen imports this great,” she noted, pointing to a WTO case against India and urging tougher restrictions.
Trump pressed for specifics. “Why is India not allowed to do that? They have to pay tariffs,” he said, directing Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to review potential actions. When told that Indian firms owned “the two largest brands” in the US retail rice market, Trump responded: “All right, and we’ll take care of it. That’s great. It’s so easy… Tariffs, again, solves the problem in two minutes.”
Tariffs also featured in a broader discussion of adversarial trade practices affecting soybeans and other crops. Trump said he had recently spoken with Chinese President Xi Jinping and expected large additional purchases. “China… is buying a tremendous amount of soybeans,” he said. “I think he’s going to do even more than he promised to do.”
For many in the room, India-related trade issues were intertwined with concerns about global competition and the future of US commodity markets. Kennedy urged the administration to recognize rice as “a national security issue,” calling it “a currency in many of these countries.” She warned that subsidized foreign rice was displacing American products abroad, including in Puerto Rico, once a major market for US-grown grain.
Trump repeatedly argued that tariff authority was essential to confronting such practices. “If we had a president that said, no, you can’t do that… we would have never lost our chip industry,” he said while tying the argument back to agricultural imports.
India-US agricultural trade has expanded over the past decade, with India exporting basmati, rice products, spices, and marine goods while importing US almonds, cotton, and pulses. Disputes over subsidies, market access and WTO complaints—particularly involving rice and sugar—have periodically strained bilateral negotiations.
China remains the largest buyer of US soybeans, and tariff-linked volatility has shaped global commodity flows since 2018. Trump’s renewed reliance on tariffs signals potential turbulence for Asian agricultural exporters in the months ahead. (IANS)
Natarajan Sivsubramanian
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indian exporters are cheating American consumers
indian exporters have three types of pricing policy
Basumati rice 100 rice
basumati rice 90 percent pure 10 per cent adulterated with punjab grown long grain rice which is similar to original basmati
basmati rice with 80 per cent pure plus 20 percent other kind of rice
they give discount to u s importers depending upon the type of rice they indent
also the importer in usa gives periodical incentive checks to whole salers/distributors in al states
this is atrocious
December 9, 2025Natarajan Sivsubramanian
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another cheating case by indian exporter
December 9, 2025they break the original long basmati rice into two and pack it and seat and put labal as ORGANIC RICE”. they dont do anything for organic quality they are making huge profits they are cheating their own diaspora in usa
importers dont care they get their share of profit