Monday, June 1, 2026

Members in the News: June 1, 2026

 Amitrajeet Batabyal, Rochester Institute of Technology

How the Holdup Problem Matters in the Indian Solar Power Market

By: Basis Point Insight – May 22, 2026

“The so-called “holdup” problem is a well-known phenomenon in the subfield of economics, known as Contract Theory. This problem arises when two parties hesitate to cooperate efficiently because they fear the other will exploit their initial investment. In other words, this problem occurs when one party makes a non-refundable, relationship-specific investment, which then gives the other party extra bargaining power to demand better terms at a subsequent point in time.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Basis Point Insight


Ricky Volpe, California Polytechnic State University

  • Americans Are About to Pay Even More at the Grocery Store
    By: Yahoo! Finance – May 27, 2026
  • Americans Are About to Pay Even More at the Grocery Store
    By: Bloomberg – May 27, 2026

Zachariah Rutledge, Michigan State University

Migrant Farm Work Booms in Michigan Despite Feds Pay Cut

By: Glen Arbor Sun – May 25, 2026

“The H-2A wage, officially referred to as the “adverse effect wage rate” or AEWR, was initially designed to protect domestic American workers. What the wage rate is supposed to do is create a wage for H-2A workers that’s high enough that it doesn’t depress the wages of domestic workers or incentivize farmers to bring in workers from abroad. But most farmers say that the cost of subsidizing housing and transportation for foreign workers accomplishes that already.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Glen Arbor Sun


David Ortega, Michigan State University

  • Grocery Prices Are Rising Again in 2026. It’s Just the Start
    By: Newsweek - May 29, 2026
  • Viral Walmart Receipt Shows What Groceries Cost 20 Years Ago
    By: USA Today – May 26, 2026

Shawn Arita, North Dakota State University

  • China's Tariff's Cost U.S. Ag Exporters $15B
    By: The Farmers Exchange – May 29, 2026
  • Iran War Fertilizer Squeeze Could Spell Trouble For Harvests
    By: AGBI – April 27, 2026
  • NDSU Researcher Explains $15 Billion U.S. Ag Export Losses Tied to Tariffs
    By: RFD-TV -  May 28, 2026
  • Economist Warns Sugar Producers Face Billion-dollar Losses, Congress Calls For Trade Investigation
    By: Korn Radio – May 22, 2026
  • House Ag Committee Member Says Need For Substantial Emergency Farmer Aid Rising
    By: Brownfield – May 22, 2026

Shawn Arita, North Dakota State University
Sandro Steinbach,
North Dakota State University

China's Tariff's Cost U.S. Ag Exporters $15B

By: The Farmers Exchange – May 29, 2026

"Soybeans account for approximately $6.8 billion, or roughly half of the total,' the study found, while 'beef and cotton each contribute about $1.3 billion, tree nuts about $964 million, and corn another $333 million.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: The Farmers Exchange


Sandro Steinbach, North Dakota State University

  • “ARPC Expands Support for Rural Businesses
    By: North Dakota Ag Connection – May 29, 2026
  • Resilience, Not Crisis, in the U.S. Agricultural Economy
    By: Swineweb – May 25, 2026

Joana Colussi, Purdue University

  • Brazil’s Second-Crop Corn System Continues Challenging U.S. Export Competitiveness
    By: RFD-TV – May 20, 2026
  • Wisconsin Farmers Brace For Fertilizer and Fuel Shocks From Iran War
    By: Herald Times Reporter – May 21, 2026
  • Missouri Farmers Facing higher fuel, fertilizer costs from Iran war
    By: KFVS12 – May 28, 2026

Sylvanus Kwaku Afesorgbor, University of Guelph

Rising Geopolitical Tensions Show Why Canada’s Agri‑Food Trade Strategy Needs to Change

By: The Conversation – May 26, 2026

“Canada is one of the world’s leading producers and exporters of agri-food products, and the sector contributed $149.2 billion of the country’s GDP in 2024. Since Canadian agricultural producers and food processors rely extensively on exports, the growth and sustainability of the sector depends heavily on international market access.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: The Conversation


Ian Sheldon, The Ohio State University

Ag Economist: USMCA Review Could Shape North American Farm Trade

By: WJAG – May 26, 2026

“Mexico’s our number one agricultural export market and Canada’s number two… It’s a little bit puzzling why the United States has reimposed anti-dumping duties against the import of tomatoes from Mexico and the U.S. currently has an anti-dumping investigation into mushroom imports from Canada and winter strawberries from Mexico.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: WJAG


Carl Zulauf, The Ohio State University

With Higher Prices, Ag Economists' Revise Their 2026 Crop Budgets Up

By: Agri Marketing – May26, 2026

“Revisions to 2026 Illinois crop budgets are provided along with updates to return estimates for the 2025 crop year. Return projections for 2026 are higher because of increases in expected prices for corn, soybeans, and wheat compared with the last crop budget release in January despite higher cost projections. Projected net returns to a typical corn-soybean rotation remain low relative to longer-run historical averages. Updates to estimates for the 2025 crop year result in slightly lower farmer returns compared with the January release.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Agri Marketing


Natalie Loduca, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Scott Swinton,
Michigan State University

How Farmers Respond to Climate-Related Risk

By: Entrepreneur Newsroom – May 30, 2026

“Crop yields depend not only on weather conditions, but also on the producer’s management decisions. We wanted to better understand how farmers perceive uncertainty under changing climate conditions.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Entrepreneur Newsroom


Kenneth Foster, Purdue University

U.S. Grocery Prices Rose in April, But Gas Spikes Weren’t the Only Reason

By: Agri news – May 30, 2026

The full impact of rising energy costs on food likely has not hit retail grocery prices yet in the United States. Higher costs to produce, process, store and transport food can take three to six months to show up on supermarket shelves, where prices typically fall slowly once increased.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Agri News



Do you have international, national, state or local news to share? Submit your
'Members in the News' now!

 

No comments:

Post a Comment