1 / 12

The Latest on the Farm Bill

The Latest on the Farm Bill. Southern Regional Outlook Conference Atlanta, Georgia September 24, 2001. Dr. Edward G. Smith Extension Economist Marketing and Policy http://afpc.tamu.edu 979-845-5913. Agricultural and Food Policy Center Texas A&M University. Presentation Outline.

curt
Download Presentation

The Latest on the Farm Bill

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Latest on the Farm Bill Southern Regional Outlook Conference Atlanta, Georgia September 24, 2001 Dr. Edward G. Smith Extension Economist Marketing and Policy http://afpc.tamu.edu 979-845-5913 Agricultural and Food Policy Center Texas A&M University

  2. Presentation Outline • Current Situation • Issue in the Debate • Timetable

  3. Current Situation • Chronic Liquidity Problem • Pro forma cash flow severe for crop producers • Not as bad for livestock and dairy • Solvency issues not as bad due to ad hoc emergency spending and lower debt service

  4. US House Ag Committee Strategy • Bipartisan: Combest/Stenholm • Ask the stakeholders • Encourage buy in by special interest • Develop a bill based on what was said

  5. What the US House Ag Committee Heard • Maintain flexibility • Maintain export competitiveness • Maintain WTO commitment • Incorporate a better safety net that reduces the need for ad hoc assistance

  6. What does H.R. 2646 Do? • Maintains flexibility • Same rules • Maintain export competitiveness • Marketing loans retained • Maintains fixed payments • Allows base update • Adds counter-cyclical target price program for income support • Extends thru 2011

  7. How Much Money?Budget Resolution • $5.5B 2001 • $7.35B 2002 • $66.1B 2003-2011 if • Surplus greater than SS/MC surplus • SS lockbox opened due to war

  8. Who Gets the Money? • (AP) Lubbock Avalanche Journal 9-10-2001 “Congress has touted the checks as a way to help small –and medium- size farms cover losses associated with natural disasters and prop up the price of certain low paying crops” But “AP’s analysis…showed that 63% of the money went to the top 10% of recipients”

  9. Who Gets the Money? • Per unit of production • Per farmer • Can new players join the game? • Can old players return?

  10. Could the Money be Spent Better? • August 22,2001 Des Moines Register “a rare chance to stop financing environmental harms and start financing environmental benefits” “fundamentally flawed because the cropping of fragile and marginal lands is reinforced by grain subsidies that stimulate production and reduce NCFI”

  11. More Issues • Flexibility vs Inventory management • Remain Export Competitive • TPA/WTO • Value of the dollar • Marketing loan • What color are the payments?

  12. Timetable • This year or next? • Congress adjourn in Oct/Nov • Terrorist Response • Budget impact • Senate using corn/soybeans as basis that ag is not together • February 2002 critical • 1996 FAIR Act expires December 2002

More Related