fbpx
Wikipedia

United States farm bill

In the United States, the farm bill is comprehensive omnibus bill that is the primary agricultural and food policy instrument of the federal government.[1] Congress typically passes a new farm bill every five to six years.[2][3]

2008 Farm Bill logo

Congress makes amendments to provisions of permanent law, reauthorizes, amends, or repeals provisions of preceding temporary agricultural acts, and puts forth new policy provisions for a limited time into the future. Beginning in 1933, farm bills have included sections ("titles") on commodity programs, trade, rural development, farm credit, conservation, agricultural research, food and nutrition programs, marketing, etc.[4]

Some provisions are highly controversial. Provisions can impact international trade, the environment, the food supply, food safety, and the economies of rural America. Powerful interest groups are poised to intervene, including organizations claiming to represent farmers (such as the American Farm Bureau Federation), as well as big agribusiness corporations (such as John Deere, Cargill, Pioneer Hi Bred International (owned by Corteva since 2019), and Monsanto (owned by Bayer since 2018). Congress is polarized along lines of ideology and interest groups. Republicans are more conservative, represent rural areas,[5] and are tied to agricultural[6] and businesses groups, while Democrats are more liberal and tied to environmentalists, cities, and labor unions. Critics sometimes warn against putting together the agricultural and nutrition parts. However, doing so helps to bridge some of the politically relevant cultural differences that exist between legislators of urban and rural, coastal and heartland areas of the country.[7] Traditionally, the agriculture programs have been more important for rural areas of the heartland, while urban and coastal regions have been more concerned with the nutrition assistance programs. There are stakeholders outside of the government that are also interested in food and agriculture issues. These include national farm groups, commodity associations, state organizations, nutrition and public health officials, advocacy groups representing conservation, recreation, rural development, faith-based interests, local food systems, and organic production.[3] Putting nutrition and agriculture topics together allows for stakeholders and advocacy coalitions with different interests to find common ground on topics that are potentially contentious between them.[3][7]

Some of the programs that are authorized in a farm bill fall into the spending category of mandatory, while others are discretionary.[3] Programs with mandatory funding have their funds authorized directly within the farm bill. On the other hand, programs with discretionary funding require for congressional appropriators to designate funding to them because they are not funded directly in the farm bill. Cost projections for funding estimates are calculated by the Congressional Budget Office using a baseline, which is an estimate of future costs over ten years if the existing costs were to continue unchanged. Adjustments to funding levels between programs generally occurs from one year to the next, incrementally.[7]

In November 2023, President Joe Biden signed into law H.R. 6363 that extended the Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018, also known as the 2018 United States farm bill, until September 20, 2024.[8]

History of farm bills: 1914 to 1981 edit

1920s edit

Farmers demanded relief as the agricultural depression grew steadily worse in the mid-1920s, while the rest of the economy flourished. Farmers had a powerful voice in Congress, and demanded federal subsidies, most notably the McNary–Haugen Farm Relief Bill. It was passed but vetoed by President Coolidge.[9] Coolidge instead supported the alternative program of Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover and Agriculture Secretary William M. Jardine to modernize farming, by bringing in more electricity, more efficient equipment, better seeds and breeds, more rural education, and better business practices. As president (1929–1933), Hoover set up the Federal Farm Board to promote efficiency and assist funding of cooperatives.[10][11]

New Deal edit

When the Great Depression began in 1929, farm prices fell sharply, and exports fell as well.[12] In this time of agricultural crisis, farmers continued to produce as much as possible in the hopes that selling high quantities would make up for low prices, further contributing to the surplus and low prices. At the same time, the urban areas faced high unemployment, so the entire nation was struggling economically.[13]

The New Deal started three closely related programs after 1933. The Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) made 12-month loans of cash against the farmers newly planted crops at a fixed price. If the market price rose higher, the farmer could pay off the loan by selling the crop for a profit. If the market price dropped below the fixed loan price, the farmer would give the harvested crop to the CCC. That would cancel the debt and leave the CCC with a storage issue. In effect CCC set a minimum price for crops such as corn, cotton and wheat. The second program was the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA). It paid farmers to replace part of their cash crops with soil conservation grasses. This hoped to reduce the crop supply on the open market and was intended to artificially inflate prices. The CCC and AAA were permanent. The third program was the temporary Farm Credit Administration (FCA) which refinanced farm mortgages in 1934–1935, at lower interest rates.[14]

Farm bills gave financial assistance to farmers who were struggling due to an excess crop supply creating low prices, and also to control and ensure an adequate food supply. The limited benefit to farmers was supposed to outweigh the ongoing hurt to consumers who paid higher food prices. On May 12, 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) of 1933 into law.[12] The AAA also included a nutrition program for consumers, the precursor to food stamps.[15]

The AAA of 1933 was an abrupt change in policy and was designed as an emergency response to the low prices of commodity crops during the Great Depression. The AAA established a primary federal role in limiting the production of certain agricultural crops including wheat, corn, and cotton hoping to reduce supply in order to artificially inflate food crop prices.[16]

President Roosevelt's New Deal agriculture focused legislation paid farmers to reduce the number of productive acres on their farms, hoping to limit the supply of commodity crops on the market. This was, however, a voluntary program, meaning farmers were not required to remove farm acres from production if they were not interested in government subsidy. Those who participated tended to remove land from production that was already producing poorly, thereby reducing their yield as little as possible, and ultimately limiting the effectiveness of the Act.[16] The AAA was short-lived as the Supreme Court deemed it unconstitutional on January 6, 1936. This was partially due to the processing tax that was used to finance payments to farmers and partially because the Court ruled government regulation of agricultural production within the states unconstitutional.[12]

In 1938, Congress created a more permanent farm bill (the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938) with a built-in requirement to update it every five years. The Commodity Credit Corporation limited farm acreage and purchased surplus crops to maintain high prices for farmers.[17]

1940–1980 edit

The Brannan Plan was a 1949 proposal of "compensatory payments" to farmers in response to the problem of large agricultural surpluses stemming from price supports for farmers. It was proposed by Charles Brannan, who served as the fourteenth United States Secretary of Agriculture from 1948 to 1953 as a member of President Harry S. Truman's cabinet. It was blocked by conservatives. The start of the Korean War in June 1950 made the surpluses a vital weapon and prices soared as surpluses were used up, making the proposal irrelevant.[18]

Senator Hubert Humphrey, a leading Democrat, in 1953 convinced bipartisan majorities in Congress to use the Commodity Credit Corporation's store of surplus crops as part of American foreign aid. The idea was that needy nations could buy grain with local currencies rather than scarce dollars, thereby exporting American surpluses and become a major part of American foreign trade policy during the Cold War.[19][20][21]

1981–1995 edit

Farm programs under the presidency of Ronald Reagan (1981–1989) were not very successful, even as the rest of the economy soared. Federal budget outlays reached $60 billion during his first term, but real farm income declined to its lowest level in postwar years. The price of farmland declined, causing a series of bankruptcies to farmers who had borrowed to buy neighboring acreage, as well as bankruptcies of local banks. Reagan advisor William A. Niskanen concluded: "One can hardly imagine a more disastrous policy outcome." The 1981 farm bill involved only small changes and continued the policy of restricting supply rather than increasing demand. The 1984 budget proposal was designed to cut subsidies rather than reform the system, but Congress rejected it. Instead, Congress continued the same policies in the 1985 farm bill, which Reagan reluctantly signed. The succeeding George H. W. Bush administration (1989–1993) again continued the same policies. Niskanen said: "The U.S. farm program is still a scandal—raising the price of food to the hungry of the world, increasing the burden to U.S. taxpayers, and restricting the output of the world's most productive farmers."[22]

1996 reforms edit

In 1996, the first major structural change was made to the farm bill when Congress decided farm incomes should be determined by free market forces and stopped subsidizing farmland and purchasing extra grain. Instead, the government began requiring farmers to enroll in a crop insurance program in order to receive farm payments. This led to years of the highest farm subsidies in American history.[15] Direct payments also began in the late 1990s as a way to support struggling farmers, regardless of crop output.[17] These payments allowed grain farmers to receive a government check every year based on yields and acreage of the farm as recorded the previous decade.[15]

Farm bills since 1996 edit

The first farm bill of the new millennium was the Farm Security Act of 2002, which was signed into law on May 13, 2002.[23] Some of the bill's major changes in comparison to the 1996 bill include an alteration of the farm payment program and the introduction of counter-cyclical farm income support. It also mandates the expansion of conservation land retirement programs and places an emphasis on environmental practices on the farm. Importantly, it restores the eligibility of legal immigrants to food stamps. Additionally, the 2002 farm bill relaxes the rules of the previous farm bill so that more borrowers may be eligible for Federal farm credit assistance, includes several commodities in the list of those that require labeling from their country of origin, and includes new provisions on the welfare of animals.[23]

In 2008, the farm bill was passed as the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008. The bill included approximately $100 billion in annual spending for Department of Agriculture programs, around 80 percent of which was allocated for food stamps and other nutritional programs.[17][24][25]

The 2008 Farm bill increased spending to $288Bn therefore causing controversy at the time by increasing the budget deficit. It increased subsidies for biofuels which the World Bank has named as one of three most important contributors, along with high fuel prices and price speculation, to the 2007–2008 world food price crisis.[26]

President George W. Bush had vetoed the 2008 bill because of its size and cost. However, the veto was overridden by Congress.[27] In 2007, it was found that about 62 percent of farmers did not receive subsidies from the farm bill.[15]

In 2012, while writing the new farm bill, known as the Agriculture Reform, Food and Jobs Act, Congress proposed many ways to cut down the overall cost of the bill, including stricter eligibility standards for food stamps and moving away from direct payments to farmers.[17] However, food stamps and nutrition remained the largest portion of the bill's cost, amounting to a proposed $768.2 billion over ten years.[28] The 2012 bill ultimately failed to pass in the House, which caused Congress to extend the 2008 bill until September 30, 2013.[29] This was enacted as part of the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012, passed by Congress on January 1, 2013, and signed into law the next day by President Barack Obama. (Public Law No: 112-240)

Between the passage of the 2008 farm bill and the creation of the 2013 bill, the food stamp program changed its name to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and nearly doubled in size.[30] The proposed 2013 bill would cut funding to SNAP by about $400 million a year, which amounts to half a percent of spending from previous years. Under an amendment introduced by Senators Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), it would also reduce crop insurance subsidies by 15 percent for the top 1 percent of U.S. wealthiest farmers, those with a gross annual income of more than $750,000.[31][32] The new bill also proposed a new insurance program for dairy producers which would cut costs by eliminating other dairy subsidies and price supports.[30]

The 2013 farm bill was approved in the Senate on June 10, 2013,[29] but did not pass the House.[33]

The 2014 farm bill, known as the Agricultural Act of 2014, was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Barack Obama on February 7, 2014, two years late, as authority under its predecessor, the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 had expired September 30, 2012. Instating modifications across multiple fronts, the bill optimized conservation programs, targeted adjustments to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and broadened initiatives for upcoming farmers, crops, rural development, and bioenergy.[34] Introduced as part of the Agricultural Act of 2008, the 2014 Farm Act repealed the Direct and Counter-Cyclical Program (DCP) and the Average Crop Revenue Election (ACRE) programs.[35] In their place, it introduced new commodity programs, including the Price Loss Coverage (PLC) program and the Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) program. These programs provided support to farmers when crop prices or revenues fell below certain reference levels. The bill further enhanced the crop insurance safety net by offering additional choices for insurance coverage, including options for different levels of protection against yield losses and price declines.[36] With a forecasted budget reduction of $17 billion over ten years, the federally subsidized crop insurance program received an annual disbursement of $1.4 billion to provide farmers with policies. Meanwhile, the food stamp program remained unaltered, shouldering 62 percent of farmers' premium expenditures.[37]

2018-2024 edit

The 2018 farm bill, or Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018, was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Donald Trump on December 20, 2018. It primarily reauthorized many programs in the 2014 Farm Bill. About three-quarters of the budget was allocated for nutritional programs such as SNAP, though the remaining quarter placed a higher emphasis on conservation efforts.[38] With the introduction of the Clean Lakes, Estuaries, and Rivers Initiative (CLEAR 30) and the Soil Health and Income Protection Pilot Program (SHIPP), greater emphasis was placed on soil and water quality, thereby advancing conservation initiatives.[39][40] It also introduced the declassification of hemp and hemp seed products, entrusting the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to oversee hemp production and application.[41] Resulting in the formation of the CBD Policy Working Group, the FDA employed cannabidiol as an active ingredient in pediatric treatments and other innovations.

The following titles in the 2018 farm bill fund efforts to reduce the environmental impact of farming and to address climate change.[42]

  • Title II, Conservation: Provides assistance to agricultural producers to address environmental resource concerns on private land. It encourages environmental stewardship and improved management through land retirement, conservation easements, working lands assistance, and partnership opportunities.[43]
  • Title VIII, Forestry: Supports forestry management programs run by USDA's Forest Service. Some of the areas that relate to climate change are wildland fire management, forest management, and restoration and protection of water sources and watersheds. Provisions are included to protect, restore, or improve greater sage-grouse and/or mule-deer habitat.[44]
  • Title IX, Energy: Encourages the development of farm and community renewable energy systems through various programs, including grants and loan guarantees. It funds research and development of energy obtained from agricultural or forestry feedstocks, commonly called bioenergy. The most prevalent form of bioenergy is ethanol. Title IX provides some financing for commercial scale production of such energy resources.[45]

Non–farm bill agriculture legislation edit

Farm bills edit

According to a Congressional Research Service primer about the 2018 farm bill, eighteen farm bills have been enacted since the 1930s.[3]

  1. Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933
  2. Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938
  3. Agricultural Act of 1948
  4. Agricultural Act of 1949
  5. Agricultural Act of 1954
  6. Agricultural Act of 1956
  7. Food and Agriculture Act of 1965
  8. Agricultural Act of 1970
  9. Agriculture and Consumer Protection Act of 1973
  10. Food and Agriculture Act of 1977
  11. Agriculture and Food Act of 1981
  12. Food Security Act of 1985
  13. Food, Agriculture, Conservation, and Trade Act of 1990
  14. Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of 1996
  15. Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002
  16. Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008
  17. Agricultural Act of 2014
  18. Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018

Proposed farm bills edit

Criticism edit

Critics have alleged that, regardless of the initial intent of farm bills dating back to 1933,[46] farm bills dating from at least the 1990s to the present have numerous harms, including:

  • Increasing the cost of food for lower- and middle-income consumers, especially sugar.[47][48]
  • Making high dollar subsidized payouts to large corporate farms and farmers while giving little to nothing to smaller and independent farms and farmers.[49]
  • Incentivizing the farming of only a select small number of crops, making Americans and global consumers less healthy by focusing diets more and more on fewer and fewer commodity food items, harming national security by highly centralizing the food production and supply chain within the United States.[50]
  • Harming public health in terms of authorizing certain pesticides to be used without oversight.[46]

One expert said of the farm bill that:

"It is a symbol of everything that’s wrong with Congress, revealing how life-sustaining policies can be taken hostage by a handful of parochial lawmakers; how incredibly difficult it is to make even minor changes that would actually help consumers and small businesses; and how intractable the divide on Capitol Hill has become, particularly between urban and rural legislators."[46]

Numerous attempts have been made to repeal the need to continue to reauthorize any sort of so-called "farm bill" at all, and instead leave farm and food prices to market forces, these attempts have failed.[46]

The aspect of the bill that specifically benefits big domestic sugar and the Fanjul brothers of Domino Sugar in particular[48] has also had numerous attempts at repeal, but each time has thus far as of 2023 failed to be repealed,[51] artificially raising the price of sugar for domestic United States consumers of any product containing sugar, while at the same time personally enriching domestic sugar producers. The largest donors in support of this particular aspect of the farm bill is the Fanjul brothers, infamous for giving to both Republican Party candidates as well as Democratic Party candidates to lobby to keep the sugar subsidy and keep out international competition from the American market demands for sugar.[52]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Johnson, Renée; Monke, Jim (October 5, 2017). What is the Farm Bill? (PDF). Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  2. ^ Monke, Jim (May 31, 2018). Farm Bills: Major Legislative Actions, 1965-2018 (PDF). Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d e Johnson, R. and Monke, J. (8 March 2019). 2018 Farm Bill Primer: What is the Farm Bill?. Congressional Research Service Report. Retrieved from https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/IF/IF11126
  4. ^ CRS Report for Congress: Agriculture: A Glossary of Terms Programs and Laws, 2005 Edition – Order Code 97-905 August 10, 2011, at the Wayback Machine,
  5. ^ Explaining the Urban-Rural Political Divide https://www.niskanencenter.org/explaining-the-urban-rural-political-divide/
  6. ^ "American Farm Bureau Political Donations". opensecrets.org.
  7. ^ a b c Wilde, Parke (2018-04-09). Food policy in the United States : an introduction (Second ed.). New York, NY. ISBN 978-1-315-47031-3. OCLC 1028731689.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ "Farm Bill Home". national-content. 2020-09-24. Retrieved 2023-12-10.
  9. ^ Theodore Saloutos and John Hicks, Twentieth Century Populism: Agricultural Discontent in the Middle West 1900–1939 (1951) pp. 372–403
  10. ^ Martin L. Fausold, "President Hoover's farm policies 1929-1933." Agricultural History 51.2 (1977): 362-377 online
  11. ^ Murray R. Benedict, Farm policies of the United States, 1790-1950 (1955) pp 239–275.
  12. ^ a b c BENEDICT, MURRAY R. (1950). "The Trend in American Agricultural Policy 1920-1949". Zeitschrift für die gesamte Staatswissenschaft / Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics. 106 (1): 97–122. ISSN 0044-2550. JSTOR 40747300.
  13. ^ Broadus Mitchell, Depression Decade : from New Era through New Deal, 1929-1941 (1947) pp 64-69, 179-227. online
  14. ^ Wayne D. Rasmussen, "The New Deal farm programs: What they were and why they survived." American Journal of Agricultural Economics 65.5 (1983): 1158-1162 online.
  15. ^ a b c d Kathleen Masterson (26 September 2011). "The Farm Bill: From Charitable Start To Prime Budget Target". NPR. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  16. ^ a b Coppess, Jonathan (December 2018). The fault lines of farm policy : a legislative and political history of the farm bill. Lincoln. ISBN 978-1-4962-1254-2. OCLC 1065523359.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  17. ^ a b c d Scott Neuman (13 June 2013). "Why The Farm Bill's Provisions Will Matter To You". NPR. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  18. ^ Allen J. Matusow, Farm Policies and Politics in the Truman Years (Harvard UP, 1967) pp 191–221.
  19. ^ Carl Solberg, Hubert Humphrey: A biography (1984) p 165.
  20. ^ Arnold A. Offner, Hubert Humphrey: The Conscience of the Country (2018). pp 103
  21. ^ Willard W. Cochrane, "Public Law 480 and Related Programs." The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 331.1 (1960): 14-19 online.
  22. ^ William A. Niskanen, Reaganomics: An Insider's Account of the Policies and the People (1988) pp 44-46, 260.
  23. ^ a b USDA Farm Policy Team (22 May 2002). "The 2002 Farm Bill: Provisions and Economic Implications" (PDF). USDA. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  24. ^ Dennis Sherer (30 April 2012). "Farm, food aid programs face debate about budgets". The Times Daily. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  25. ^ Mannix Porterfield (16 May 2008). "Rockefeller blasts Bush on threatened farm bill veto". Register Herald. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  26. ^ Global Economic Prospects: Commodities at the Crossroads, World Bank Report 2009 page 52, ISBN 978-0-8213-7799-4
  27. ^ "Congress passes farm bill over Bush veto - CNN.com". www.cnn.com. Retrieved 2021-02-10.
  28. ^ Brad Plumer (14 June 2012). "The Senate farm bill, in one graph". The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  29. ^ a b Alison Crissman (12 June 2013). "Senate approves new farm bill". The Daily Iowan. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  30. ^ a b Mary Clare Jalonick (10 June 2013). . Time Magazine. Archived from the original on June 19, 2013. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  31. ^ Cox, Ramsey (23 May 2013). "Senate votes 59–33 to reduce subsidies for the wealthiest farmers". The Hill. Washington, DC. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
  32. ^ "At the trough: An awful farm bill faces opposition". The Economist. Chicago. 1 June 2013.
  33. ^ Kick, Chris (1 November 2013). "Sense of urgency as farm bill conference begins". Farm and Dairy newspaper. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  34. ^ "USDA ERS - Agricultural Act of 2014: Highlights and Implications". www.ers.usda.gov. Retrieved 2023-08-28.
  35. ^ "Farm Bill Title I Commodity Programs – ARC, PLC and Marketing Assistance Loans". American Farm Bureau Federation. Retrieved 2023-08-28.
  36. ^ "Crop Insurance Provisions in the 2014 Farm Bill (P.L. 113-79)". www.everycrsreport.com. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  37. ^ Nixon, Ron (2014-02-04). "Senate Passes Long-Stalled Farm Bill, With Clear Winners and Losers". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-08-28.
  38. ^ "USDA ERS - Farm Bill Spending". www.ers.usda.gov. Retrieved 2023-08-28.
  39. ^ "What's New: FSA and the 2018 Farm Bil" (PDF). Farm Service Agency. Retrieved 2023-08-27.
  40. ^ Earl, Andrew (2021-04-22). "USDA Makes Changes Requested by Hunting and Fishing Community to Boost the Conservation Reserve Program". Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  41. ^ Abernethy, Amy (2019-07-25). "Hemp Production and the 2018 Farm Bill - 07/25/2019". FDA. Retrieved 2023-08-28.
  42. ^ "What is the Farm Bill?" (PDF). November 30, 2023.
  43. ^ "Agricultural Conservation in the 2018 Farm Bill" (PDF). April 18, 2019.
  44. ^ "Forest Management Provisions Enacted in the 115th Congress" (PDF). April 17, 2019.
  45. ^ "Farm Bill Primer: Energy Title". November 1, 2022.
  46. ^ a b c d Shephard, Alex (2018-05-18). "The Farm Bill Is Everything That's Wrong With Congress". The New Republic. ISSN 0028-6583. Retrieved 2023-08-22.
  47. ^ Mario H. Lopez, Opinion Contributor (2022-09-01). "Food security issues, farmers' pessimism greet the 2023 farm bill". The Hill. Retrieved 2023-08-22. {{cite web}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  48. ^ a b "In the Kingdom of Big Sugar". Vanity Fair. 2011-01-05. Retrieved 2023-08-22.
  49. ^ "Updated EWG Farm Subsidy Database shows largest producers reap billions, despite climate crisis | Environmental Working Group". www.ewg.org. 2023-02-01. Retrieved 2023-08-22.
  50. ^ "AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD MARKETING MANAGEMENT". www.fao.org. Retrieved 2023-08-22.
  51. ^ "Inside the next $1.5 trillion farm bill that will shape how America eats with a former Agriculture official". Fortune. Retrieved 2023-08-22.
  52. ^ Levy, Gabrielle (June 27, 2018). "9 Things in the Farm Bill That Affect (Almost) Every American".

Further reading edit

  • Benedict, Murray R. "The Trend in American Agricultural Policy 1920-1949". Zeitschrift für die gesamte Staatswissenschaft / Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics (1950) 106#1: 97–122 online
  • Benedict, Murray R. Farm policies of the United States, 1790-1950: a study of their origins and development (1966) 546pp online; also another copy
  • Bosso, Christopher. Framing the Farm Bill: Interests, Ideology, and Agricultural Act of 2014 (University Press of Kansas, 2017).
  • Cochrane, Willard W. The Development of American Agriculture: A Historical Analysis (2nd ed. U of Minnesota Press, 1993) 512pp.
  • Cochrane, Willard W. and Mary Ellen Ryan. American Farm Policy: 1948-1973 (U of Minnesota Press, 1976).
  • CQ. Congress and the Nation (1965-2021), highly detailed coverage of each presidency since Truman; extensive coverage of agricultural policies. online free to borrow
  • Coppess, Jonathan. The Fault Lines of Farm Policy: A Legislative and Political History of the Farm Bill (University of Nebraska Press, 2018). excerpt
  • Coppess, Jonathan, et al. "The Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018: Initial Review." farmdoc daily (2018). online
  • Gardner, Bruce L. "The federal government in farm commodity markets: Recent reform efforts in a long-term context." Agricultural History 70.2 (1996): 177–195. online
  • Matusow, Allen J. Farm policies and politics in the Truman years (1967) online
  • Mozaffarian, Dariush, Timothy Griffin, and Jerold Mande. "The 2018 Farm Bill—implications and opportunities for public health." JAMA 321.9 (2019): 835–836.
  • Orden, David and Carl Zulauf. "Political economy of the 2014 farm bill." American Journal of Agricultural Economics 97.5 (2015): 1298–1311. online
  • Sumner, Daniel A. "Farm subsidy tradition and modern agricultural realities." The 2007 Farm Bill and Beyond (2007): 29–33. online
  • Taylor, Mykel R., et al. "Is it good to have options? The 2014 farm bill program decisions." Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy 39.4 (2017): 533–546.
  • Zulauf, Carl and David Orden, "The U.S. Agricultural Act of 2014: Overview and Analysis." (International Food Policy Research Institute discussion paper 01393, 2014) online
  • Zulauf, Carl, and David Orden. "80 Years of Farm Bills—Evolutionary Reform." Choices (2016) 31#4 pp 1–7 online

Historiography edit

  • Zobbe, Henrik. "On the foundation of agricultural policy research in the United States." (Dept. of Agricultural Economics Staff Paper 02–08, Purdue University, 2002) online.

Primary sources edit

  • Rasmussen, Wayne D., ed. Agriculture in the United States: A Documentary History (4 vol, Random House, 1975) 3661pp. vol 4 online

External links edit

  • 2018FarmBill.pdf

united, states, farm, bill, united, states, farm, bill, comprehensive, omnibus, bill, that, primary, agricultural, food, policy, instrument, federal, government, congress, typically, passes, farm, bill, every, five, years, 2008, farm, bill, logo, congress, mak. In the United States the farm bill is comprehensive omnibus bill that is the primary agricultural and food policy instrument of the federal government 1 Congress typically passes a new farm bill every five to six years 2 3 2008 Farm Bill logo Congress makes amendments to provisions of permanent law reauthorizes amends or repeals provisions of preceding temporary agricultural acts and puts forth new policy provisions for a limited time into the future Beginning in 1933 farm bills have included sections titles on commodity programs trade rural development farm credit conservation agricultural research food and nutrition programs marketing etc 4 Some provisions are highly controversial Provisions can impact international trade the environment the food supply food safety and the economies of rural America Powerful interest groups are poised to intervene including organizations claiming to represent farmers such as the American Farm Bureau Federation as well as big agribusiness corporations such as John Deere Cargill Pioneer Hi Bred International owned by Corteva since 2019 and Monsanto owned by Bayer since 2018 Congress is polarized along lines of ideology and interest groups Republicans are more conservative represent rural areas 5 and are tied to agricultural 6 and businesses groups while Democrats are more liberal and tied to environmentalists cities and labor unions Critics sometimes warn against putting together the agricultural and nutrition parts However doing so helps to bridge some of the politically relevant cultural differences that exist between legislators of urban and rural coastal and heartland areas of the country 7 Traditionally the agriculture programs have been more important for rural areas of the heartland while urban and coastal regions have been more concerned with the nutrition assistance programs There are stakeholders outside of the government that are also interested in food and agriculture issues These include national farm groups commodity associations state organizations nutrition and public health officials advocacy groups representing conservation recreation rural development faith based interests local food systems and organic production 3 Putting nutrition and agriculture topics together allows for stakeholders and advocacy coalitions with different interests to find common ground on topics that are potentially contentious between them 3 7 Some of the programs that are authorized in a farm bill fall into the spending category of mandatory while others are discretionary 3 Programs with mandatory funding have their funds authorized directly within the farm bill On the other hand programs with discretionary funding require for congressional appropriators to designate funding to them because they are not funded directly in the farm bill Cost projections for funding estimates are calculated by the Congressional Budget Office using a baseline which is an estimate of future costs over ten years if the existing costs were to continue unchanged Adjustments to funding levels between programs generally occurs from one year to the next incrementally 7 In November 2023 President Joe Biden signed into law H R 6363 that extended the Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018 also known as the 2018 United States farm bill until September 20 2024 8 Contents 1 History of farm bills 1914 to 1981 1 1 1920s 1 2 New Deal 1 3 1940 1980 1 4 1981 1995 1 5 1996 reforms 2 Farm bills since 1996 2 1 2018 2024 3 Non farm bill agriculture legislation 4 Farm bills 5 Proposed farm bills 6 Criticism 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Historiography 9 2 Primary sources 10 External linksHistory of farm bills 1914 to 1981 edit1920s edit Further information McNary Haugen Farm Relief Bill Farmers demanded relief as the agricultural depression grew steadily worse in the mid 1920s while the rest of the economy flourished Farmers had a powerful voice in Congress and demanded federal subsidies most notably the McNary Haugen Farm Relief Bill It was passed but vetoed by President Coolidge 9 Coolidge instead supported the alternative program of Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover and Agriculture Secretary William M Jardine to modernize farming by bringing in more electricity more efficient equipment better seeds and breeds more rural education and better business practices As president 1929 1933 Hoover set up the Federal Farm Board to promote efficiency and assist funding of cooperatives 10 11 New Deal edit When the Great Depression began in 1929 farm prices fell sharply and exports fell as well 12 In this time of agricultural crisis farmers continued to produce as much as possible in the hopes that selling high quantities would make up for low prices further contributing to the surplus and low prices At the same time the urban areas faced high unemployment so the entire nation was struggling economically 13 The New Deal started three closely related programs after 1933 The Commodity Credit Corporation CCC made 12 month loans of cash against the farmers newly planted crops at a fixed price If the market price rose higher the farmer could pay off the loan by selling the crop for a profit If the market price dropped below the fixed loan price the farmer would give the harvested crop to the CCC That would cancel the debt and leave the CCC with a storage issue In effect CCC set a minimum price for crops such as corn cotton and wheat The second program was the Agricultural Adjustment Administration AAA It paid farmers to replace part of their cash crops with soil conservation grasses This hoped to reduce the crop supply on the open market and was intended to artificially inflate prices The CCC and AAA were permanent The third program was the temporary Farm Credit Administration FCA which refinanced farm mortgages in 1934 1935 at lower interest rates 14 Farm bills gave financial assistance to farmers who were struggling due to an excess crop supply creating low prices and also to control and ensure an adequate food supply The limited benefit to farmers was supposed to outweigh the ongoing hurt to consumers who paid higher food prices On May 12 1933 President Franklin D Roosevelt signed the Agricultural Adjustment Act AAA of 1933 into law 12 The AAA also included a nutrition program for consumers the precursor to food stamps 15 The AAA of 1933 was an abrupt change in policy and was designed as an emergency response to the low prices of commodity crops during the Great Depression The AAA established a primary federal role in limiting the production of certain agricultural crops including wheat corn and cotton hoping to reduce supply in order to artificially inflate food crop prices 16 President Roosevelt s New Deal agriculture focused legislation paid farmers to reduce the number of productive acres on their farms hoping to limit the supply of commodity crops on the market This was however a voluntary program meaning farmers were not required to remove farm acres from production if they were not interested in government subsidy Those who participated tended to remove land from production that was already producing poorly thereby reducing their yield as little as possible and ultimately limiting the effectiveness of the Act 16 The AAA was short lived as the Supreme Court deemed it unconstitutional on January 6 1936 This was partially due to the processing tax that was used to finance payments to farmers and partially because the Court ruled government regulation of agricultural production within the states unconstitutional 12 In 1938 Congress created a more permanent farm bill the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 with a built in requirement to update it every five years The Commodity Credit Corporation limited farm acreage and purchased surplus crops to maintain high prices for farmers 17 1940 1980 edit The Brannan Plan was a 1949 proposal of compensatory payments to farmers in response to the problem of large agricultural surpluses stemming from price supports for farmers It was proposed by Charles Brannan who served as the fourteenth United States Secretary of Agriculture from 1948 to 1953 as a member of President Harry S Truman s cabinet It was blocked by conservatives The start of the Korean War in June 1950 made the surpluses a vital weapon and prices soared as surpluses were used up making the proposal irrelevant 18 Senator Hubert Humphrey a leading Democrat in 1953 convinced bipartisan majorities in Congress to use the Commodity Credit Corporation s store of surplus crops as part of American foreign aid The idea was that needy nations could buy grain with local currencies rather than scarce dollars thereby exporting American surpluses and become a major part of American foreign trade policy during the Cold War 19 20 21 1981 1995 edit Farm programs under the presidency of Ronald Reagan 1981 1989 were not very successful even as the rest of the economy soared Federal budget outlays reached 60 billion during his first term but real farm income declined to its lowest level in postwar years The price of farmland declined causing a series of bankruptcies to farmers who had borrowed to buy neighboring acreage as well as bankruptcies of local banks Reagan advisor William A Niskanen concluded One can hardly imagine a more disastrous policy outcome The 1981 farm bill involved only small changes and continued the policy of restricting supply rather than increasing demand The 1984 budget proposal was designed to cut subsidies rather than reform the system but Congress rejected it Instead Congress continued the same policies in the 1985 farm bill which Reagan reluctantly signed The succeeding George H W Bush administration 1989 1993 again continued the same policies Niskanen said The U S farm program is still a scandal raising the price of food to the hungry of the world increasing the burden to U S taxpayers and restricting the output of the world s most productive farmers 22 1996 reforms edit In 1996 the first major structural change was made to the farm bill when Congress decided farm incomes should be determined by free market forces and stopped subsidizing farmland and purchasing extra grain Instead the government began requiring farmers to enroll in a crop insurance program in order to receive farm payments This led to years of the highest farm subsidies in American history 15 Direct payments also began in the late 1990s as a way to support struggling farmers regardless of crop output 17 These payments allowed grain farmers to receive a government check every year based on yields and acreage of the farm as recorded the previous decade 15 Farm bills since 1996 editThe first farm bill of the new millennium was the Farm Security Act of 2002 which was signed into law on May 13 2002 23 Some of the bill s major changes in comparison to the 1996 bill include an alteration of the farm payment program and the introduction of counter cyclical farm income support It also mandates the expansion of conservation land retirement programs and places an emphasis on environmental practices on the farm Importantly it restores the eligibility of legal immigrants to food stamps Additionally the 2002 farm bill relaxes the rules of the previous farm bill so that more borrowers may be eligible for Federal farm credit assistance includes several commodities in the list of those that require labeling from their country of origin and includes new provisions on the welfare of animals 23 In 2008 the farm bill was passed as the Food Conservation and Energy Act of 2008 The bill included approximately 100 billion in annual spending for Department of Agriculture programs around 80 percent of which was allocated for food stamps and other nutritional programs 17 24 25 The 2008 Farm bill increased spending to 288Bn therefore causing controversy at the time by increasing the budget deficit It increased subsidies for biofuels which the World Bank has named as one of three most important contributors along with high fuel prices and price speculation to the 2007 2008 world food price crisis 26 President George W Bush had vetoed the 2008 bill because of its size and cost However the veto was overridden by Congress 27 In 2007 it was found that about 62 percent of farmers did not receive subsidies from the farm bill 15 In 2012 while writing the new farm bill known as the Agriculture Reform Food and Jobs Act Congress proposed many ways to cut down the overall cost of the bill including stricter eligibility standards for food stamps and moving away from direct payments to farmers 17 However food stamps and nutrition remained the largest portion of the bill s cost amounting to a proposed 768 2 billion over ten years 28 The 2012 bill ultimately failed to pass in the House which caused Congress to extend the 2008 bill until September 30 2013 29 This was enacted as part of the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 passed by Congress on January 1 2013 and signed into law the next day by President Barack Obama Public Law No 112 240 Between the passage of the 2008 farm bill and the creation of the 2013 bill the food stamp program changed its name to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program SNAP and nearly doubled in size 30 The proposed 2013 bill would cut funding to SNAP by about 400 million a year which amounts to half a percent of spending from previous years Under an amendment introduced by Senators Dick Durbin D Ill and Tom Coburn R Okla it would also reduce crop insurance subsidies by 15 percent for the top 1 percent of U S wealthiest farmers those with a gross annual income of more than 750 000 31 32 The new bill also proposed a new insurance program for dairy producers which would cut costs by eliminating other dairy subsidies and price supports 30 The 2013 farm bill was approved in the Senate on June 10 2013 29 but did not pass the House 33 The 2014 farm bill known as the Agricultural Act of 2014 was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Barack Obama on February 7 2014 two years late as authority under its predecessor the Food Conservation and Energy Act of 2008 had expired September 30 2012 Instating modifications across multiple fronts the bill optimized conservation programs targeted adjustments to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program SNAP and broadened initiatives for upcoming farmers crops rural development and bioenergy 34 Introduced as part of the Agricultural Act of 2008 the 2014 Farm Act repealed the Direct and Counter Cyclical Program DCP and the Average Crop Revenue Election ACRE programs 35 In their place it introduced new commodity programs including the Price Loss Coverage PLC program and the Agriculture Risk Coverage ARC program These programs provided support to farmers when crop prices or revenues fell below certain reference levels The bill further enhanced the crop insurance safety net by offering additional choices for insurance coverage including options for different levels of protection against yield losses and price declines 36 With a forecasted budget reduction of 17 billion over ten years the federally subsidized crop insurance program received an annual disbursement of 1 4 billion to provide farmers with policies Meanwhile the food stamp program remained unaltered shouldering 62 percent of farmers premium expenditures 37 2018 2024 edit The 2018 farm bill or Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018 was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Donald Trump on December 20 2018 It primarily reauthorized many programs in the 2014 Farm Bill About three quarters of the budget was allocated for nutritional programs such as SNAP though the remaining quarter placed a higher emphasis on conservation efforts 38 With the introduction of the Clean Lakes Estuaries and Rivers Initiative CLEAR 30 and the Soil Health and Income Protection Pilot Program SHIPP greater emphasis was placed on soil and water quality thereby advancing conservation initiatives 39 40 It also introduced the declassification of hemp and hemp seed products entrusting the Food and Drug Administration FDA to oversee hemp production and application 41 Resulting in the formation of the CBD Policy Working Group the FDA employed cannabidiol as an active ingredient in pediatric treatments and other innovations The following titles in the 2018 farm bill fund efforts to reduce the environmental impact of farming and to address climate change 42 Title II Conservation Provides assistance to agricultural producers to address environmental resource concerns on private land It encourages environmental stewardship and improved management through land retirement conservation easements working lands assistance and partnership opportunities 43 Title VIII Forestry Supports forestry management programs run by USDA s Forest Service Some of the areas that relate to climate change are wildland fire management forest management and restoration and protection of water sources and watersheds Provisions are included to protect restore or improve greater sage grouse and or mule deer habitat 44 Title IX Energy Encourages the development of farm and community renewable energy systems through various programs including grants and loan guarantees It funds research and development of energy obtained from agricultural or forestry feedstocks commonly called bioenergy The most prevalent form of bioenergy is ethanol Title IX provides some financing for commercial scale production of such energy resources 45 Non farm bill agriculture legislation editFederal Farm Loan Act of 1916 Frazier Lemke Farm Bankruptcy Act of 1934 Bankhead Jones Farm Tenant Act of 1937 Farm Credit Act of 1971Farm bills editAccording to a Congressional Research Service primer about the 2018 farm bill eighteen farm bills have been enacted since the 1930s 3 Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933 Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 Agricultural Act of 1948 Agricultural Act of 1949 Agricultural Act of 1954 Agricultural Act of 1956 Food and Agriculture Act of 1965 Agricultural Act of 1970 Agriculture and Consumer Protection Act of 1973 Food and Agriculture Act of 1977 Agriculture and Food Act of 1981 Food Security Act of 1985 Food Agriculture Conservation and Trade Act of 1990 Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of 1996 Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002 Food Conservation and Energy Act of 2008 Agricultural Act of 2014 Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018Proposed farm bills editFederal Agriculture Reform and Risk Management Act of 2013 H R 1947 113th Congress H R 1947 failed passage in the House Agriculture Reform Food and Jobs Act of 2013 S 954 113th Congress S 954 passed the Senate failed in the HouseCriticism editCritics have alleged that regardless of the initial intent of farm bills dating back to 1933 46 farm bills dating from at least the 1990s to the present have numerous harms including Increasing the cost of food for lower and middle income consumers especially sugar 47 48 Making high dollar subsidized payouts to large corporate farms and farmers while giving little to nothing to smaller and independent farms and farmers 49 Incentivizing the farming of only a select small number of crops making Americans and global consumers less healthy by focusing diets more and more on fewer and fewer commodity food items harming national security by highly centralizing the food production and supply chain within the United States 50 Harming public health in terms of authorizing certain pesticides to be used without oversight 46 One expert said of the farm bill that It is a symbol of everything that s wrong with Congress revealing how life sustaining policies can be taken hostage by a handful of parochial lawmakers how incredibly difficult it is to make even minor changes that would actually help consumers and small businesses and how intractable the divide on Capitol Hill has become particularly between urban and rural legislators 46 Numerous attempts have been made to repeal the need to continue to reauthorize any sort of so called farm bill at all and instead leave farm and food prices to market forces these attempts have failed 46 The aspect of the bill that specifically benefits big domestic sugar and the Fanjul brothers of Domino Sugar in particular 48 has also had numerous attempts at repeal but each time has thus far as of 2023 failed to be repealed 51 artificially raising the price of sugar for domestic United States consumers of any product containing sugar while at the same time personally enriching domestic sugar producers The largest donors in support of this particular aspect of the farm bill is the Fanjul brothers infamous for giving to both Republican Party candidates as well as Democratic Party candidates to lobby to keep the sugar subsidy and keep out international competition from the American market demands for sugar 52 See also editAlternative Agricultural Research and Commercialization Corporation Farmers suicides in the United StatesReferences edit Johnson Renee Monke Jim October 5 2017 What is the Farm Bill PDF Washington DC Congressional Research Service Retrieved 12 October 2017 Monke Jim May 31 2018 Farm Bills Major Legislative Actions 1965 2018 PDF Washington DC Congressional Research Service Retrieved 14 June 2018 a b c d e Johnson R and Monke J 8 March 2019 2018 Farm Bill Primer What is the Farm Bill Congressional Research Service Report Retrieved from https crsreports congress gov product pdf IF IF11126 CRS Report for Congress Agriculture A Glossary of Terms Programs and Laws 2005 Edition Order Code 97 905 Archived August 10 2011 at the Wayback Machine Explaining the Urban Rural Political Divide https www niskanencenter org explaining the urban rural political divide American Farm Bureau Political Donations opensecrets org a b c Wilde Parke 2018 04 09 Food policy in the United States an introduction Second ed New York NY ISBN 978 1 315 47031 3 OCLC 1028731689 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Farm Bill Home national content 2020 09 24 Retrieved 2023 12 10 Theodore Saloutos and John Hicks Twentieth Century Populism Agricultural Discontent in the Middle West 1900 1939 1951 pp 372 403 Martin L Fausold President Hoover s farm policies 1929 1933 Agricultural History 51 2 1977 362 377 online Murray R Benedict Farm policies of the United States 1790 1950 1955 pp 239 275 a b c BENEDICT MURRAY R 1950 The Trend in American Agricultural Policy 1920 1949 Zeitschrift fur die gesamte Staatswissenschaft Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics 106 1 97 122 ISSN 0044 2550 JSTOR 40747300 Broadus Mitchell Depression Decade from New Era through New Deal 1929 1941 1947 pp 64 69 179 227 online Wayne D Rasmussen The New Deal farm programs What they were and why they survived American Journal of Agricultural Economics 65 5 1983 1158 1162 online a b c d Kathleen Masterson 26 September 2011 The Farm Bill From Charitable Start To Prime Budget Target NPR Retrieved 18 June 2013 a b Coppess Jonathan December 2018 The fault lines of farm policy a legislative and political history of the farm bill Lincoln ISBN 978 1 4962 1254 2 OCLC 1065523359 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d Scott Neuman 13 June 2013 Why The Farm Bill s Provisions Will Matter To You NPR Retrieved 18 June 2013 Allen J Matusow Farm Policies and Politics in the Truman Years Harvard UP 1967 pp 191 221 Carl Solberg Hubert Humphrey A biography 1984 p 165 Arnold A Offner Hubert Humphrey The Conscience of the Country 2018 pp 103 Willard W Cochrane Public Law 480 and Related Programs The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 331 1 1960 14 19 online William A Niskanen Reaganomics An Insider s Account of the Policies and the People 1988 pp 44 46 260 a b USDA Farm Policy Team 22 May 2002 The 2002 Farm Bill Provisions and Economic Implications PDF USDA a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Dennis Sherer 30 April 2012 Farm food aid programs face debate about budgets The Times Daily Retrieved 18 June 2013 Mannix Porterfield 16 May 2008 Rockefeller blasts Bush on threatened farm bill veto Register Herald Retrieved 18 June 2013 Global Economic Prospects Commodities at the Crossroads World Bank Report 2009 page 52 ISBN 978 0 8213 7799 4 Congress passes farm bill over Bush veto CNN com www cnn com Retrieved 2021 02 10 Brad Plumer 14 June 2012 The Senate farm bill in one graph The Washington Post Retrieved 18 June 2013 a b Alison Crissman 12 June 2013 Senate approves new farm bill The Daily Iowan Retrieved 18 June 2013 a b Mary Clare Jalonick 10 June 2013 Senate Passes Farm Bill Moving Debate to House Time Magazine Archived from the original on June 19 2013 Retrieved 18 June 2013 Cox Ramsey 23 May 2013 Senate votes 59 33 to reduce subsidies for the wealthiest farmers The Hill Washington DC Retrieved 4 June 2013 At the trough An awful farm bill faces opposition The Economist Chicago 1 June 2013 Kick Chris 1 November 2013 Sense of urgency as farm bill conference begins Farm and Dairy newspaper Retrieved 29 January 2014 USDA ERS Agricultural Act of 2014 Highlights and Implications www ers usda gov Retrieved 2023 08 28 Farm Bill Title I Commodity Programs ARC PLC and Marketing Assistance Loans American Farm Bureau Federation Retrieved 2023 08 28 Crop Insurance Provisions in the 2014 Farm Bill P L 113 79 www everycrsreport com Retrieved 2023 08 29 Nixon Ron 2014 02 04 Senate Passes Long Stalled Farm Bill With Clear Winners and Losers The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 08 28 USDA ERS Farm Bill Spending www ers usda gov Retrieved 2023 08 28 What s New FSA and the 2018 Farm Bil PDF Farm Service Agency Retrieved 2023 08 27 Earl Andrew 2021 04 22 USDA Makes Changes Requested by Hunting and Fishing Community to Boost the Conservation Reserve Program Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership Retrieved 2023 08 29 Abernethy Amy 2019 07 25 Hemp Production and the 2018 Farm Bill 07 25 2019 FDA Retrieved 2023 08 28 What is the Farm Bill PDF November 30 2023 Agricultural Conservation in the 2018 Farm Bill PDF April 18 2019 Forest Management Provisions Enacted in the 115th Congress PDF April 17 2019 Farm Bill Primer Energy Title November 1 2022 a b c d Shephard Alex 2018 05 18 The Farm Bill Is Everything That s Wrong With Congress The New Republic ISSN 0028 6583 Retrieved 2023 08 22 Mario H Lopez Opinion Contributor 2022 09 01 Food security issues farmers pessimism greet the 2023 farm bill The Hill Retrieved 2023 08 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a first has generic name help a b In the Kingdom of Big Sugar Vanity Fair 2011 01 05 Retrieved 2023 08 22 Updated EWG Farm Subsidy Database shows largest producers reap billions despite climate crisis Environmental Working Group www ewg org 2023 02 01 Retrieved 2023 08 22 AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD MARKETING MANAGEMENT www fao org Retrieved 2023 08 22 Inside the next 1 5 trillion farm bill that will shape how America eats with a former Agriculture official Fortune Retrieved 2023 08 22 Levy Gabrielle June 27 2018 9 Things in the Farm Bill That Affect Almost Every American Further reading editBenedict Murray R The Trend in American Agricultural Policy 1920 1949 Zeitschrift fur die gesamte Staatswissenschaft Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics 1950 106 1 97 122 online Benedict Murray R Farm policies of the United States 1790 1950 a study of their origins and development 1966 546pp online also another copy Bosso Christopher Framing the Farm Bill Interests Ideology and Agricultural Act of 2014 University Press of Kansas 2017 Cochrane Willard W The Development of American Agriculture A Historical Analysis 2nd ed U of Minnesota Press 1993 512pp Cochrane Willard W and Mary Ellen Ryan American Farm Policy 1948 1973 U of Minnesota Press 1976 CQ Congress and the Nation 1965 2021 highly detailed coverage of each presidency since Truman extensive coverage of agricultural policies online free to borrow Coppess Jonathan The Fault Lines of Farm Policy A Legislative and Political History of the Farm Bill University of Nebraska Press 2018 excerpt Coppess Jonathan et al The Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018 Initial Review farmdoc daily 2018 online Gardner Bruce L The federal government in farm commodity markets Recent reform efforts in a long term context Agricultural History 70 2 1996 177 195 online Matusow Allen J Farm policies and politics in the Truman years 1967 online Mozaffarian Dariush Timothy Griffin and Jerold Mande The 2018 Farm Bill implications and opportunities for public health JAMA 321 9 2019 835 836 Orden David and Carl Zulauf Political economy of the 2014 farm bill American Journal of Agricultural Economics 97 5 2015 1298 1311 online Sumner Daniel A Farm subsidy tradition and modern agricultural realities The 2007 Farm Bill and Beyond 2007 29 33 online Taylor Mykel R et al Is it good to have options The 2014 farm bill program decisions Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy 39 4 2017 533 546 Zulauf Carl and David Orden The U S Agricultural Act of 2014 Overview and Analysis International Food Policy Research Institute discussion paper 01393 2014 online Zulauf Carl and David Orden 80 Years of Farm Bills Evolutionary Reform Choices 2016 31 4 pp 1 7 online Historiography edit Zobbe Henrik On the foundation of agricultural policy research in the United States Dept of Agricultural Economics Staff Paper 02 08 Purdue University 2002 online Primary sources edit Rasmussen Wayne D ed Agriculture in the United States A Documentary History 4 vol Random House 1975 3661pp vol 4 onlineExternal links edit2018FarmBill pdf Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States farm bill amp oldid 1219182539, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.