United States | Here be dragons

Why politicians are obsessed with mythical Chinese land grabs

No, the Communist Party is not buying up farms

Two cows stand in a snow covered field in Iowa.
Photograph: Getty Images
|Chicago

There was a time when Kim Reynolds, the governor of Iowa, had no problem with Chinese investment. In 2012, when she was the state’s lieutenant governor, she met Xi Jinping, then China’s vice-premier, on a visit to Beijing. In 2017, as governor, she visited again, this time posing with Vice-Premier Wang Yang. No longer. In her Condition of the State address to Iowa’s legislature on January 9th, Ms Reynolds claimed that “China continues to grow more aggressive, and buying American land has been one of the many ways they have waged this new battle.” Later this year she intends to introduce a new law that would toughen land-ownership reporting rules in Iowa. “American farmland should stay in American hands,” she says.

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Here be dragons ”

From the January 27th 2024 edition

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