The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has issued its report on the national security implications of how the US government collects, shares, and considers foreign purchases and ownership of US agricultural land. It generally concluded the process suffers from significant gaps in information collection and timely information sharing with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States and other agencies, which may create, or have already created, unaddressed national security risks. Following recommendations from GAO, Congress introduced draft bipartisan legislation intended to address these gaps.
One hundred and nineteen congressional requesters (from both the House of Representatives and US Senate) asked the GAO to “review foreign investments in agricultural land”[1] and report on the manner in which the US government collects and shares foreign purchase information with CFIUS and other US government agencies.
The January 19, 2024 report (GAO-24-106337) focused on the US Department of Agriculture’s (Agriculture’s or the agency’s) process for collecting information on foreign purchase of US agricultural land to identify responsible personnel, document collection, information sharing, and follow-through by the agency.
Congress passed the Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure Act of 1978, as amended (AFIDA),[2] which required foreign persons and legal entities that acquire an interest in US agricultural land to submit reports to the agency that include at least the following information: (1) details of the transactions, (2) identification of the parties (including ownership of the parties), and (3) the land being acquired.
The statute also granted Agriculture the authority to request additional information from the parties and determine the impact of these investments on family farms and rural communities. The agency was also tasked with monitoring compliance and penalizing parties for failing to file required forms.[3]
The accompanying regulations[4] identify the circumstances in which reports are required and include definitions to help inform the public of the requirements. Key definitions include the following:
The AFIDA requires submission of reports (Form FSA-153) to allow the agency to assess the impact of the foreign ownership on impacted communities. Agriculture is also tasked with notifying other agencies, including the US Department of Defense (DOD) and CFIUS, of land purchases that could affect US national security interests.
The report details the process and notes that the original act required Agriculture to publish annual reports on foreign ownership and its impact on US interests. Congress, however, repealed the agency’s reporting obligations in 1998, although the agency continues to publish aggregate statistics. The data published by Agriculture includes:
The country of foreign investor requirement does not specify whether it is the ultimate beneficial owner (as the investor) or whether the direct entity conducting the purchase needs to be reported. According to the GAO report, this lack of clarity raises questions regarding whether the data provided by Agriculture accurately and completely identifies the foreign ownership.
For example, an investor from Country X could establish an investment vehicle in Country Y that would then purchase the agricultural land. While Form FSA-153 requires submission of the “purchaser,” which would be the investment vehicle from Country Y, the true foreign investor would be from Country X. This gap may affect how other agencies or entities, such as DOD or CFIUS, consider the national security impact of the foreign ownership.
According to the most current Agriculture report, from 2021, Canada, the Netherlands, and Italy represent the top three investors in US agricultural land, and, in the aggregate, these three countries hold 50% of the foreign-owned agricultural land. Overall, nearly half of the holdings for all foreign investors involve forest land accounts, and 54% of foreign holdings involve other-than-direct ownership, such as long-term leases.[9]
Against this backdrop, the GAO identified several significant gaps that demonstrate where national security issues remain unaddressed.
The GAO made several findings that directly affect the manner in which other agencies or processes identify national security concerns, in particular the following:
Agriculture Is Not a Member of CFIUS
Agriculture is not a member of CFIUS but does participate in Committee proceedings when the US Department of the Treasury (Treasury) determines that the transaction involves equities related to the agency. The current situation highlights at least two weaknesses in the CFIUS process:
AFIDA Information Is Not Regularly Shared with CFIUS on More Frequent or Timely Basis
The GAO found that Agriculture shares information with CFIUS but not “on a timely basis to be useful for CFIUS reviews.”[11]
While Agriculture provides information annually, DOD noted that it needs the information more frequently and in greater detail in order to be useful to the national security review process. The agency publishes the Foreign Holdings of US Agricultural Land report on its website, which includes aggregate information but does not include other details the agency collects such as detailed ownership information, country(ies) of affiliation of foreign investors, and locations of individuals agricultural land transactions.
Neither does the Agriculture report include aggregate holdings of the same foreign investors that would allow other agencies and CFIUS to assess whether specific foreign investors were accumulating agricultural land purchases in specific jurisdictions, near particular facilities, or across various counties. This information would permit for a more detailed assessment of potential US government concerns.
For example, DOD advised GAO of the following:
Additional Data Integrity, Information Collection, and Intergovernmental Sharing Issues
Given these gaps, GAO recommended several changes to the process to enhance reporting and the utility of the information collected:
The GAO report provides Congress additional data points to consider and both the House and Senate have drafted bills to add Agriculture as a member of CFIUS as well as expand CFIUS’s jurisdiction to review agricultural transactions.
The recommendations do not include express timelines for when Agriculture should complete the various actions noted but, based on Agriculture’s comments regarding the recommendations included in Appendix III to the report, the agency agreed with all but one recommendation and noted that some actions are in process. Agriculture expressed concerns with the recommendation that it confirm the completeness and clarity of any reports, noting that the task would be challenging without additional resources and funding.
Congress wasted no time in acting upon the GAO report. On January 25, 2024, a group of bipartisan US senators[16] introduced draft legislation titled The AFIDA Improvements Act of 2024 designed to address the key issues noted in the GAO report.
The draft legislation focuses on addressing the gaps related to Agriculture-CFIUS communications, electronic submissions, and reporting in more granular detail on ultimate beneficial owners (all, rather than just the primary owner). As Senator Young’s press release related to the bill noted when he joined the bipartisan sponsors, the important areas the bill seeks to remediate include the following:
Based on this early and substantive congressional interest, we anticipate further actions by the House and Senate to include additional draft legislation and hearings regarding the scope of the issue as well as the solutions.
If you have any questions or would like more information on the issues discussed in this LawFlash, please contact any of the following:
[1] GAO-24-106337 at 1 (January 2024).
[2] 7 USC §§ 3501 et seq.
[3] GAO-24-106337 at 11.
[4] 7 CFR §§ 781 et seq.
[5] 7 CFR § 781.2(g).
[6] 7 CFR § 781.2(k).
[7] 7 CFR § 781.2(c).
[8] 7 CFR § 781.2(b).
[9] GAO-24-106337 at 13-14.
[10] This issue remains a broader concern as Treasury controls whether other agencies may participate as co-lead agencies on CFIUS reviews and whether an agency may continue in that role. This raises questions regarding how an agency may preserve its equities when Treasury decides whether, when, and how the agency may engage in the CFIUS process. See 31 CFR § 800.230.
[11] GAO-24-106337 at 19.
[12] Id.
[13] Id. Treasury noted that it would be useful to collect “data such as the identity of the foreign owner, their country of origin, and status of their US residency or citizenship, as well as more details about the nature of the transaction.” Id.
[14] Id. at 31.
[15] Id. at 33.
[16] As of the date of this LawFlash, the following US senators co-sponsored the draft legislation: (1) Republican Senators Ernst, Hagerty, Marshall, Rubio, Young, Braun, Britt, Schmitt, and Tuberville; and (2) Democrat Senators S. Brown, Baldwin, Fetterman, and Tester. See also Press Release, US Senator Mike Braun, Senate Bill Would Press USDA to Improve Tracking of Foreign Ownership of US Farmland (Jan. 25, 2024).