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The Dairy Subtitle of the Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008

The Dairy Subtitle of the Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008. 2008 Farm Bill Education Conference Brian W. Gould Associate Professor Department of Agricultural. and Applied Economics University of Wisconsin-Madison July 8, 2008. http://future.aae.wisc.edu.

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The Dairy Subtitle of the Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008

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  1. The Dairy Subtitle of the Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008 2008 Farm Bill Education Conference Brian W. Gould Associate Professor Department of Agricultural. and Applied Economics University of Wisconsin-Madison July 8, 2008

  2. http://future.aae.wisc.edu

  3. Dairy Subtitle of the 2008 Farm Bill • Dairy Subtitle General Characteristics • Dairy not the cause of lengthy delay • In contrast to last 2 Farm Bills • No major changes from current programs • Reconciliation of House and Senate versions were relatively harmonious • Delay in enactment benefited dairy interests • Change in MILC program with more realistic target for triggering payments via feed cost adjuster added in Conference Committee • Jesse, Cropp and Gould (2008) Briefing Paper on Dairy Subtitle Available from UW Website

  4. Dairy Product Price Support Program • Milk Price Support Program (MPSP) • Established by the Agricultural Act of 1949 and used to support manufacturing milk price • 75-90% parity based on relationship between milk price and farm costs over 1910-14 • Parity used in setting support price over 1950-1981 • Milk price supported by CCC purchases of cheddar cheese, NFDM and butter • 1981 support price was $13.10, $9.90 since 1999 • MPSP Accounted for 25% of WTO Aggregate Measure of Support (AMS) for U.S. Agriculture

  5. Dairy Product Price Support Program • Dairy Product Price Support Program (DPPSP) • Under 2008 Farm Bill, MPSP renamed Dairy Product Price SupportProgram • CCC purchases dairy products to support commodity prices not manufacturing milk price • Support prices Cheddar: Blocks $1.13 Barrels $1.10 Butter: $1.05 NFDM: $0.80 • USDA can sell back CCC inventories • ≥ 110% of current CCC purchase price • DPPSP is an attempt to reduce dairy’s contribution to the U.S. AMS • No longer supporting a particular milk price No Change From 2007 Level

  6. Dairy Product Price Support Program • Implications of Supporting Dairy Commodity Prices • The issue of butter-powder tilts no longer a problem • Butter and NFDM considered joint products • Under previous program if butter support price ↓ than NFDM support price would be ↑ in order to maintain milk support price • Allow Sec. of Agriculture to Reduce Support Prices • If CCC 12-month net removals exceed certain levels • A policy option but not required to be undertaken

  7. Dairy Product Price Support Program Conditions Under Which Support Prices Can be Reduced

  8. Dairy Product Price Support Program • Implications of Supporting Dairy Commodity Prices • Low probability that net removals will reach levels triggering possible price reductions • CCC purchase prices are so low → farm milk prices well below cost of production → supply response • Except for a few years, CCC annual purchases have been well below trigger levels

  9. Dairy Product Price Support Program

  10. Milk Income Loss Contract Program • Milk Income Loss Contract (MILC) Program • Similar to initial MILC program and subsequent MILCX extension • Differences between new MILC and previous • A variable target price system established • Price deficiency payment rate (% of difference between target and market price paid) • The cap on annual eligible milk marketings • The following table provides a summary of MILC program characteristics under 2008 Bill

  11. Milk Income Loss Contract Program

  12. Milk Income Loss Contract Program • Milk Income Loss Contract (MILC) Program • Major change is the ability to adjust target price according to changes in feed cost • Feed cost: Cost of 16% protein dairy ration used by USDA in its milk-feed price ratio • 51% corn, 41% alfalfa hay, 8% soybeans • National Base Feed Cost is set at $7.35/cwt of feed • Increases to $9.50 in Sept. 2012

  13. Milk Income Loss Contract Program • MILC Price Deficiency Rate • Original MILC payment rate: 45% of difference between $16.94 and actual Class I Boston price • MILC-X extension: 34% starting in Oct. 2005 • 2008 Farm Bill: 45% from Oct. 2008 – Aug. 2012 34% thereafter • MILC Annual Eligible Milk Production • Original MILC: Payments limited to 2.4 mil. lbs • Producers can not opt out of program once participation starts • 2008 Farm Bill: Limit ↑ to 2.985 mil. lbs.

  14. Milk Income Loss Contract Program • Eligible Milk Production • Using 2007 average U.S. milk yield • 2.400 mil. lb produced by 118 cows • 2.985 mil. lb produced by 147 cows • 83% of farms have their entire milk production covered by MILC • Account for 22% of U.S. milk production • 2,890 additional farms fully covered w/ higher limit • 7.5 billion additional milk covered • 4% more of both farms and production • We estimate that 44% of U.S. milk production could be covered by new limit

  15. Milk Income Loss Contract Program Maximum No. of Cows Covered by MILC Program by Herdsize

  16. Milk Income Loss Contract Program • How is Feed Cost Adjuster Used to Set Target Price? • At the end of each month, USDA calculates National Average Dairy Feed Cost • Compare value with current $7.35 base • If current average feed cost > $7.35 • Calculate % difference between current vs. base • Multiply % difference by 0.45 • The resulting % used to increase $16.94 Boston Class I target • Spreadsheet Model Available: future.aae.wisc.edu/collection/software/MILC_Cost_Adjuster.xls

  17. Milk Income Loss Contract Program • Feed Cost Adjuster Calculation Example #1 • Based on May 2008 data • USDA’s Agricultural Prices report is data source • Corn ($/bu): $5.12 • Alfalfa ($/ton): $177.00 • Soybeans ($/bu): $12.30 • → Dairy ration cost ($/cwt) of $9.93 • % diff. over base = ($9.93 – $7.35)/$7.35 = 0.3512 • → MILC target adjuster = 0.3512*0.45 = 0.16 • New MILC Price Target = 1.16*$16.94 = $19.65 • May Class I Boston price: $16.62+3.25 = $19.87 • → No MILC payment May Class I Mover Boston Differential

  18. Milk Income Loss Contract Program • Feed Cost Adjuster Calculation Example #2 • We simulate system over August ′08 – May ′09 • Use June 24th futures market data to evaluate potential for MILC payments over next 11 months • Corn, Soybeans and Class III • Interpolate across months with no futures • Alfalfa Hay: 20% over Aug. ′07 through May ′08 values to account for higher costs due to weather and flooding conditions

  19. Milk Income Loss Contract Program Simulated Feed Costs and MILC Targets: Aug. 08-May 09

  20. Dairy Forward Pricing Program • Renews the 2000-2004 Pilot Forward Pricing Program • Voluntary program • Applied to milk marketed under FMMO’s • Does not apply to Class I milk • Producers continue to be able to receive minimum FMMO price if not forward priced • For handlers not cooperatives, the program terminates Sept. 30, 2012 • Contracts allowed to be in effect until Sept. 30, 2015

  21. Dairy Export Incentive Program • Dairy Export Incentive Program (DEIP) • Authorized by 1985 Farm Bill • Dairy export subsidy program designed to: • Promote dairy product exports • Facilitate international market development • Provide a way to remove surplus dairy products • Activity level depends on relative international dairy product prices • When U.S. prices above world prices, very active subsidy program • Recently no activity given increased international prices

  22. Federal Milk Marketing Order Amendment Procedures • Sets Procedures for USDA to Accelerate FMMO Hearings • 30 days after receiving hearing request • Must issue a timeline for actions that result in completion of hearing within 120 days • Request information from petitioners to use in making decision whether to hold a hearing • Deny the request • Post-hearing briefs filed within 60 days of hearing • Must issue recommended decision within 90 days of deadline for filing post-hearing briefs • Must issue final decision within 60 days of deadline for receiving comments and exceptions to decision

  23. Federal Milk Marketing Order Amendment Procedures • The Entire Process for Amending an Order • Would still require at least 1 year under expedited rules • Could be longer if • USDA requests further information from petitioners • Allows lengthy time for filing comments and exceptions to recommended decision

  24. Federal Milk Marketing Order Review Commission • Establish an FMMO Review Commission to Review Federal and Non-Federal Marketing Order Systems • Consider legislative and regulatory procedures to: • Enhance future competitiveness of dairy products • Ensure transparency in dairy pricing • Simply FMMO system • Evaluate whether FMMO’s serve interests of producers, processors and consumers • Determine costs/benefits of adjusting milk composition standards • 14 member commission • Report within 2 years after 1st meeting.

  25. Other Legislation • Dairy Promotion and Research Program • Reauthorized Dairy Check-Off Program • Now includes all states, Puerto Rico and D.C • Authorized 7.5¢ assessment per milk equivalent for imported dairy products • USDA Reports to Congress Within 90 Days Concerning NFDM Price Reporting Procedures and Procedure Impacts on FMMO Pricing • Strengthens Mandatory Reporting of Dairy-Related Sales and Inventory • Establish electronic reporting system

  26. Contact Information • Jesse, Cropp and Gould, 2008. Dairy Subtitle: Food, Conservationand Energy Act of 2008, Department of Ag. and Applied Economics, U. of Wisconsin • Univ. of Wisconsin Dairy Marketing Website:http://future.aae.wisc.edu • Brian W. Gould Dept. of Agricultural and Applied Economics (608)263-3212 bwgould@wisc.edu

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