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The Economics and Politics of U.S. Agricultural Policy

The Economics and Politics of U.S. Agricultural Policy . James Dunn Pennsylvania State University. Since 1990, 17% of political contributions from agriculture have come from sugar growers. Sugar is less than 1% of agricultural output Why?. Sugar in New Farm Bill.

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The Economics and Politics of U.S. Agricultural Policy

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  1. The Economics and Politics of U.S. Agricultural Policy James Dunn Pennsylvania State University

  2. Since 1990, 17% of political contributions from agriculture have come from sugar growers. Sugar is less than 1% of agricultural outputWhy?

  3. Sugar in New Farm Bill • Traditionally sugar program cost nothing • NAFTA changes that Mexican sugar comes in w/o tariff or quota since Jan 2008 • Buy Mexican sugar for 21 cts/lb and sell it to ethanol producers for 6 cts/lb • $140 million per year cost to taxpayer, plus much more to consumer ($1.5 bil.)

  4. Impact of technological change in agriculture

  5. History • Started in 1930s as temporary measure • Political support remained after depression • Farm problems recur regularly • Lots of programs – I’ll talk about price and income programs

  6. Economics of Agricultural Policy • Idea- raise farm incomes, end farm failures • Give one time boost • Don’t work in long run • Don’t stop farm exit • Subsidize large farms more • Subsidize rich at expense of others -average farm family has higher income and much higher wealth than the average US household

  7. Types of Policies • Simple price supports – creates surplus that must be purchased and sold at loss – usually exported - expensive • Quotas – limits production – makes it difficult to expand – quota gains value if sold

  8. Price support Government purchases

  9. Purchases • What do you do with the surplus you buy? • If you give it away what about the farmers trying to compete with free food?

  10. Quota

  11. Dairy Cows • If milk price is high, what happens to price of cows? • Who will pay the most? • Do higher cost farmers make any money?

  12. Rentable Quota • Who will pay the most to rent the quota? • How much will they pay? • Who will pay the least rent? • How much will they pay? • Who makes money?

  13. Capitalization of Programs • Farmers learn program will continue • Price of land and cows and other specialized assets reflects value to best farmers • Artificially high milk prices drive up prices of cows • Poorest farmers still lose money

  14. Loss of markets • Price supports reduce competitiveness in international markets, e.g., loss of soybean exports to Brazilian producers • Higher prices stimulate substitution by other commodities in consumption, e.g., high fructose corn syrup

  15. Some important points • Very few farmers • House of Representatives based on population – disproportionately urban • Senate – two members per state – more rural interests represented • Often control of Congress very close - in 2008 • Senate 49-49-2 (independents caucus w/ Dems) • House 232 -200 (3 vacant)

  16. Other Points • Farmers vote together • In a close election farm vote can be very important • No one wants to tell farmers no

  17. The Coalition • Farmers • Consumers • Environmentalists • Other food sector participants, e.g., fertilizer companies

  18. Program Commodities • Feed grains – mostly corn • Oil seeds – mostly soybeans • Wheat • Cotton, rice, sugar, peanuts • Dairy products • Wool, mohair, honey, dry peas • 13% of Farm Bill spending

  19. Bio-Fuels • Subsidies for corn from ethanol • Loans for bio-refineries • Corn and soybean prices are very high • Vegetable oil prices very high • Very little savings in petroleum use

  20. Geographic distribution of government payments as a proportion of gross cash income from farming Source:USDA Source: USDA

  21. Main Milk Producing States Bill. lbs. 0 to 5 5 to 10 10 to 15 20 to 25 35 to 40

  22. Non-controversial Parts • Can’t fight over everything • Rest is non-controversial • Research • Extension • Trade • Environment • No change unless everyone agrees • Inertia

  23. Policy and GATT • Small countries walked out in Cancun. Why?

  24. Policy and freer trade • Free trade agreement with Australia (January 1, 2005) • Duties on most industrial goods eliminated • Special treatment for agriculture, especially sugar and dairy products • Central American Free Trade Agreement was held up over agriculture (sugar) but passed in 2005 • NAFTA disputes - many over agriculture (tomatoes, sugar)

  25. Concluding Comments • Not a big success • Very costly • Extremely important politically – domestically and internationally • With close elections – won’t go away

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