About this episode
Tariffs aren’t just political strategy—they’re shaping what you eat, how much it costs, and whether the farms that feed you can survive. In this episode, we walk through the on-again, off-again tariff rollercoaster of March and April 2025—from Liberation Day declarations to global retaliation to quiet backpedaling—and explore how it’s impacting food prices, trade relationships, farm viability, and campaign promises.You’ll hear directly from New Hampshire farmer Jeremiah Vernon on how grain tariffs from Canada are putting pressure on livestock farms, and why small farmers are bracing for higher input costs and tighter margins. Plus, a breakdown of the biggest U.S. agricultural imports and exports, how tariffs work, and what to watch for next.Key Topics:What the U.S. exports and imports in food and agricultureWhy China’s retaliatory tariffs hit U.S. soy, pork, and dairyHow uncertainty is paralyzing farm planning and investmentWhy grocery prices are expected to rise—againThe contradiction between tariff policy and campaign promises to lower food costsWhat you can do right now to support a resilient food systemSources:U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (bls.gov)USDA Economic Research Service (ers.usda.gov)Reuters, AP News, New York Times, Financial TimesThe New York Times: [Tariff Chart Snapshot]OBIE original interview with Jeremiah Vernon, Vernon Family Farm