WASHINGTON – Sen. Chuck Grassley
(R-Iowa), a member of the Agriculture Committee and lifelong family farmer, and
Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), a member of the Agriculture Committee and chairman
of the Banking and Housing Committee, today introduced a new bill that would
prevent foreign individuals from obtaining credit and financial services
through the Farm Credit System (FCS). Currently, certain foreign individuals
and entities are eligible to receive credit through this government-sponsored
enterprise.
“The expansion of foreign-owned farmland
is a justified cause for concern among many family farmers and ranchers. It
poses a potential threat to our domestic food supply, and by extension, to our
national security. Building on my previous efforts to get a better handle on
foreign-owned farmland, our bill will ensure no foreign investors can use loans
from a government-sponsored entity to buy up valuable acres. This is a
commonsense step to ensure foreign buyers, like those backed by China, aren’t
taking prime land away from American family farmers with help from the U.S.
government,” Grassley said.
“We created the Farm Credit System to
ensure farmers and agriculture workers in Ohio and across the country have
access to affordable credit – not to benefit foreign investors and hostile
governments,” said Brown. “Foreign
governments, especially China, have bought up prime farmland across this
country at an alarming rate for decades. This will put in place a clear
standard: American taxpayer dollars should not be used as a financing tool for
foreign governments to undermine our national security and take our family farms.”
FCS was established in 1916 to provide
credit to rural areas when commercial lenders were avoiding farm loans. It is
mandated and limited by statute to serve agriculture. In 2021, FCS had a
portfolio of roughly $210 billion in farm loans.
Since 1997, Farm Credit Administration
(FCA) regulations have allowed FCS associations to extend credit to certain
foreign nationals who are not permanent residents of the United States and to
foreign-owned entities. Grassley and Brown’s bipartisan Farm Credit for Americans Act would make foreign individuals and
entities, as defined by the Agricultural
Foreign Investment Disclosure Act, ineligible for financing through the
FCS.
Grassley was the original author of the
Agriculture
Foreign Investment Disclosure Act, which requires foreign nationals to report their U.S. agricultural
holdings to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Alongside Sen. Tammy
Baldwin (D-Wis.), Grassley recently introduced the
Farmland
Security Act to increase
scrutiny over foreign investments in American agricultural land. Last year,
Grassley also introduced the
Food
Security is National Security Act to give top U.S. agriculture and food officials permanent
representation on the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States
(CFIUS).
Learn more about Grassley’s years-long
effort to address this issue in a Q&A he published
HERE.
Full text of the bill is available
HERE.
-30-