- New Initiative Launched by Farm Bureau
- NCGA Concerned by Rail Request to Stop Shipping Anhydrous Ammonia
- BLM Looks to Tap Into Western Oil Shale Potential
- New Study Looks at the Drivers Behind Food Prices
- Union Pacific to release earnings report Thursday
- Decision on Critical Feed Use Expected
- Nebraska issues embargo on California, New Mexico cattle
- WTO Director-General Tweaks Geneva Process
- K-State Economist Sees Beef Output Cuts
- Upcoming K-State Agricultural Events
- Profitable Landownership Topic of Omaha Workshop
- USGC Increases Farmer Incomes
- U.S. Export Potential in China Promising, Strong in Japan, Taiwan
- NCGA participates in Washington news conference
- Additional Counties Approved For CRP Emergency Haying
- UNL Dairy Store Destination for Many
- Aug. 23 UNL Extension Organic Farm Tour Offered Near Mead
- Hearing set in challenge to emergency grazing
- AFBF Backs Change in Trucking Regulations
- U.S. Farmers Adapting to Varying Weather Patterns is Crucial
- Latest on the Salmonella Outbreak
- A Picture Perfect Summer To Show Cattle
- $6.9M Awarded for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Projects
- Inhofe Introduces Bill to Change Trucking Regulations
- Chambliss Concerned with Plan to Address Speculation
- One Small Step on Energy Speculation Bill
- No Word From Judge on CRP Critical Feed Use
- Harkin Welcomes U.S. Proposal
SAO PAULO, May 12 (Reuters) - Agricultural powerhouse Brazil will allow the country's farm sector to renegotiate repayment of 87 billion reais ($52 billion) in debt to incite growers to raise output, it's Agriculture Minister said on Monday.
By easing debt repayments, the government hopes to free up cash within the sector for investments that would lead to higher output of strategic crops in response to tight global food supplies and the spike in the price of staples.
The decision should raise incomes for farmers exporting their crops while prices remain high and help ease domestic inflationary pressure by increasing supplies of staple food.
"The objective is to reduce the impact of supply for the domestic consumer," Agriculture Minister Reinhold Stephanes said on Monday according to a statement from the ministry, which said target crops were rice, wheat, corn and beans.
Brazil's soy and corn producers are just coming out of the worst crisis in decades and other producers in areas that produce sugar cane, coffee, wheat and cocoa carry significant amounts of debt that limits investments in expansion and modernization.
Stephanes, speaking at a seminar hosted by the Sao Paulo Industry Federation Fiesp, said a provisional decree should be signed by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva this week, which would allow government-backed lenders to renegotiate terms to the benefit of the productive sector.
Brazil's government subsidizes farm-sector credit as an area of strategic interest. The main holder of agricultural debt in Brazil is the state-run Banco do Brasil, Latin America's largest commercial bank in terms of assets.
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