From Claire Kelloway <[email protected]>
Subject Food & Power - Shutdown Hits Packers and Stockyards Division, USDA Cancels More Antimonopoly Projects
Date October 20, 2025 11:34 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Did someone forward you this newsletter?

Get your own copy by subscribing here [[link removed]], and to share this story click here. [[link removed]]

Is Food & Power landing in your spam? Try adding [email protected] to your contacts.

Photo by iStock/ Neal McNeil [[link removed]]

Shutdown Hits Packers and Stockyards Division, USDA Cancels More Antimonopoly Projects [[link removed]] [[link removed]]

The government shutdown, set to enter a fourth week [[link removed]], threatens vulnerable farmers and families. Critical food assistance programs are only fully funded through the end of the month [[link removed]], farm disaster [[link removed]] and conservation payments [[link removed]] are on pause, and federal farm loan offices are closed [[link removed]]. Among the many furloughed USDA offices is one that protects farmers from corporate abuse, the Packers and Stockyards division [[link removed]].

The shutdown is just the latest blow to agriculture antimonopoly enforcement, as the Trump administration quietly dismantles Biden-era projects. Over the past few months, the USDA has canceled several antimonopoly partnerships [[link removed]], including a contract that managed its Farmer Seed Liaison [[link removed]] initiative. Ending these programs runs counter to USDA’s recent promise [[link removed]] to collaborate with the Department of Justice to improve competition in agricultural input markets.

From seeds to grocery stores, a few corporations dominate every step [[link removed]] of the food supply chain: just four companies sell 80% of all U.S. corn seed, three control 76% of all nitrogen fertilizer, and two process 45% of all chicken. Farmers say they are getting squeezed [[link removed]] between high input costs and low crop prices. The government shutdown and cancellation of antimonopoly programs at USDA make it harder to hold dominant agribusiness corporations accountable for price-gouging, exclusionary conduct, and other anti-competitive behavior.

Government shutdown rules permit federal agencies to continue work related to “emergencies involving the safety of human life or the protection of property.” USDA used this rationale to continue running its Market News [[link removed]] commodity price reports, which many meatpackers and food manufacturers rely on to price their contracts. However, the USDA decided to furlough all the staff in its Packers and Stockyards division, which protects farmers from late or short payment, a form of property theft.

This is not unprecedented; President Obama’s USDA also furloughed the Packers and Stockyards division during the 2013 government shutdown. Nonetheless, closing this division means that livestock producers will experience delays in investigating and enforcing potential violations of the Packers and Stockyards Act, leaving them more vulnerable to underpayment, discrimination, or market manipulation. Further, any backlog of investigations into meatpacker abuse will be further delayed.

New programs introduced during the Biden administration to support meatpacker competition may also experience delays, namely [[link removed]] the Meat and Poultry Processing Technical Assistance [[link removed]] program, Meat and Poultry Processing Expansion Plant [[link removed]] grant program, and the Local Meat Capacity [[link removed]] grant program.

The Trump administration had already curtailed competition policy enforcement at USDA before the shutdown. Last month, USDA ended [[link removed]] a $15 million [[link removed]] project with the State Center, called the Agricultural Competition Partnership, which hosted educational events and distributed grants to state attorneys general to support agricultural antitrust enforcement. A group of 31, bi-partisan state attorneys general were counting on these resources to support new investigations and possible litigation against unfair corporate practices in food and farm markets. State attorneys general have substantial authority to challenge dominant agricultural input manufacturers, retailers, and food processors; however, these offices have very limited funds and staff time to take on costly antitrust cases.

The Agricultural Competition Partnership was one of several fair competition cooperative agreements [[link removed]] to get the axe in September. The USDA also canceled its Seed Liaison partnership with the University of Wisconsin-Madison, which helped farmers and seed breeders navigate the complex world of seed patents and contracts. Patent restrictions make it challenging for breeders to develop new plant varieties or for independent researchers to study the performance of different patented seeds. Restrictive contracts and exclusionary marketing tactics also make it hard for independent seed companies to break into the market and for farmers to find cheaper seed options. Opaque online seed labels further obscure plant varieties so farmers may think they’re buying multiple varieties when in fact they aren’t.

The Seed Liaison project took steps to help farmers, small seed companies, and plant breeders navigate these challenges, such as publishing seed contract guides, a newsletter of upcoming plant variety patents, and a report [[link removed]]on competition issues in the seed industry. It ran a tip line for farmers and seed businesses to anonymously report complaints about unfair seed contracts or onerous IP restrictions. It also coordinated a working group [[link removed]] between the USDA, the U.S. Patent Office, the DOJ, and the FTC, which all share different aspects of seed regulation, resulting in new guidance [[link removed]] to improve federal seed researchers’ ability to study some patented varieties.

Earlier this month, USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins announced that USDA will collaborate with the DOJ to investigate anticompetitive conduct by seed companies, just weeks after USDA canceled a program that did exactly this. Kiki Hubbard, one of the University of Wisconsin staff that worked on the Seed Liaison cooperative agreement, hopes that USDA will build upon their work. “Our team is pleased to see that the USDA wants to continue coordinating with the Department of Justice by looking into competition concerns in seeds and other agriculture markets,” Hubbard says. “We hope they will lean on the foundation of research that has already been done.”

The Senate Farm Bill proposed funding [[link removed]] an in-house seed liaison team at USDA. However, Farm Bill negotiations are at a standstill after Republicans renewed large segments of the Farm Bill [[link removed]] through budget reconciliation. Further, the Office of Management and Budget has pushed USDA to cut staff, not add. USDA has lost more than 15% of its workforce [[link removed]], which has set back [[link removed]] agricultural research [[link removed]] and exacerbated delays for farmers, particularly those seeking safety net payments [[link removed]] or applying for conservation programs [[link removed]].

OMB director Russ Vought urged agencies to carry out reduction-in-force plans during the shutdown to lay off more federal workers. Some agencies attempted to lay off more than 4,000 workers [[link removed]], but a Judge temporarily blocked [[link removed]] these and future firings during the shutdown, siding with unions that argued these layoffs were illegal.

Find and share this story originally published on [[link removed]] Food & Power [[link removed]] . [[link removed]]

What We're Reading

For a full breakdown of the federal shutdown’s impacts on farmers, check out the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition’s latest blog. ( NSAC [[link removed]])

The harms of corporate concentration took center stage at the 40th Farm Aid concert. ( Civil Eats [[link removed]])

Nestle, the world’s largest food company, plans to lay off 16,000 of its 277,000 workers over the next two years. Cuts will mostly affect white collar workers, Nestle says. ( New York Times [[link removed]])

Donate to Support Food & Power [[link removed]] About the Open Markets Institute

Our team of reporters, lawyers, and economists works to revive competition policy to build stronger democracies, more just and equitable societies, more innovative and sustainable economies, and a more secure and peaceful world.

Follow F&P on Twitter [[link removed]] | Subscribe [[link removed]] to this Newsletter | F&P Website [[link removed]] | Contact Us [[link removed]]

Tweet [link removed] Share [[link removed]] Forward [link removed]

Written by Claire Kelloway

Edited by Anita Jain

Open Markets Institute

655 15th St NW Suite 310

Washington D.C., xxxxxx

Unsubscribe [link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis