US agriculture has big appetite for Cuba trade

A CENTRAL Illinois corn farmer, on top of his combine, is silhouetted against the setting sun while harvesting corn in Pleasant Plains, Ill., Sept. 27. U.S. agriculture has a big appetite for freer trade with Cuba, and corn is one of the main products Cuba now buys from the United States.

MINNEAPOLIS — U.S. agriculture has a big appetite for freer trade with Cuba. From wheat to rice to beans, the industry stands to be one of the biggest beneficiaries of President Barack Obama's plan to ease economic and travel restrictions imposed against the communist-ruled island.

Agricultural exports have been among the few exceptions to the half-century old U.S. trade embargo, though they've been subject to cumbersome rules — requiring cash payments up front before products are shipped, and that the payments go through banks in other countries that charge hefty fees for their services.