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The Next Farm Bill: Alternatives and Impacts

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Title: The Next Farm Bill: Alternatives and Impacts


1
The Next Farm BillAlternatives and Impacts
  • Joe L. Outlaw
  • Professor and Extension Economist
  • Co-Director, AFPC
  • Ag 2007 Forecast
  • Statesboro, Georgia
  • February 20, 2007

2
Presentation Outline
  • A Little About My Background and AFPC
  • Long-term Outlook Under Current Policy
  • WTOs Relation to the Farm Bill
  • Administration Proposal
  • Preliminary Results
  • Renewable Energy
  • 2007 Farm Bill
  • Conclusions

Farm Bill
3
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4
Agricultural and Food Policy Center (AFPC)
  • Mission
  • Established in 1983 as a joint activity of
  • Texas Agricultural Experiment Station
  • Texas Cooperative Extension
  • Texas AM University
  • To conduct analyses of the impacts of government
    policy proposals and/or implementation procedures
    on
  • Farmers
  • Agribusinesses
  • Taxpayers
  • Consumers
  • Primary constituency agricultural committees of
    the U.S. Congress
  • Primary role to serve as a barometer for
    agriculture

5
Agricultural and Food Policy Center (AFPC)
  • Educational Programs and Publications
  • 1985 - 2002 Farm Bill Analyses
  • Base and Yield Analyzer (BYA)(GA connection)
  • National and International Reputation
  • Farm level policy analysis incorporating risk
  • FLIPSIM farm level simulation policy analysis
    model
  • Crop, livestock, and dairy policy
  • Environmental/resource policy
  • Tax policy

6
Representative Farms and Ranches
Dairy
Wheat
Wheat
Dairy
Wheat
Wheat
Feed Grain
Cattle
Dairy
Cattle
Dairy
Cattle
Dairy
Dairy
Cattle
Feed Grain
Cattle
Rice
Feed Grain
Cattle
Feed Grain
Feed Grain
Wheat
Wheat
Feed Grain
Cotton
Cattle
Dairy
Cattle
Wheat
Rice
Cotton
Dairy
Cattle
Feed Grain
Rice
Cotton
Cotton
Cotton
Feed Grain
Rice
Cotton
Rice
Cotton
Dairy
Cattle
Cotton
Cotton
Dairy
Cotton
Cotton
Cotton
Dairy
Camilla
Rice
Feed Grain
Cotton
Dairy
Dairy
Feed Grain
Rice
Feed Grain
Rice
Cattle
Cattle
Cotton
Cotton
Dairy
Cotton
7
FY 2006 Budget Outlays
8
FAPRI January 2007 Baseline Market Price, Loan
Rate, and Target Price for Corn, 1998-2011
9
FAPRI January 2007 Baseline Market Price, Loan
Rate, and Target Price for Sorghum, 1998-2011
10
FAPRI January 2007 Baseline Market Price, Loan
Rate, and Target Price for Wheat, 1998-2011
11
FAPRI January 2007 Baseline Market Price, Loan
Rate, and Target Price for Cotton, 1998-2011
12
FAPRI January 2007 Baseline Market Price, Loan
Rate, and Target Price for Rice, 1998-2011
13
FAPRI January 2007 Baseline Market Price for
Steers and Cull Cows, 1998-2011
14
FAPRI January 2007 Baseline Market Price for U.S.
All Milk, 1998-2011
15
So What Does This Mean for the New Farm Bill?
  • CBO March 2007 Baseline not likely to have
    significant commodity program expenditures for
    LDPs and CCPs
  • In the Baseline Scoring world, current policy
    projected out 10 years is the score
  • High prices for most commodities mean very little
    payments
  • Livestock production is going to see higher feed
    costs

16
March 2006 CBO Baseline of Government Payments to
All Program Crops, 2007-2016 (Mil. )
17
AFPC Projection of How CBO Might Score Government
Payments to All Program Crops, 2007-2016 (Mil. )
18
So What Does This Mean for the New Farm Bill?
  • What kind of policy can you change to with very
    little money being spent that is going to be
    better?
  • In the policy world, the primary way you make
    someone better off is strengthen the safety net
    more potential support

19
WTOs Relation to the Farm Bill
  • New WTO panel will likely rule early this summer
    so any changes required may be taken up as real
    Farm Bill work will be just beginning
  • May be told to more fully comply
  • Canadas request for consultations on the corn
    program
  • Primarily for pressure
  • Biggest impact at this point likely over
    trade-offs with Administration needed to gain
    extension of TPA
  • Rumors are flying that agreement is near again!

20
What Weve Learned Since 2002
  • While the current farm program has served its
    purpose for the last several years, it is time to
    move on and craft a new, better farm bill. To
    create such we need to look at the success and
    failures of the current farm bill with a goal of
    improving upon this bill.
  • - Kenneth from TX

20
21
Administrations Proposal
  • Commodity Programs (WTO)
  • Revise Marketing Loan Rates
  • 5 yr Olympic average of market price
  • LDP based on day lose beneficial interest
  • Increase direct payments by 5.5 billion
  • Primarily cotton and rice
  • Replace CCP with nationally based Revenue
    Assurance
  • Continue MILC (lower payments) and DPSP (no
    Baseline for MILC and left PS for WTO)
  • Continue sugar program (left for WTO to fix)
  • No peanut storage payments
  • Payment limits (save 1.5 billion - somehow)
  • Eliminate 3 entity rule
  • New limits (110,000 each DP and CCP and 140,000
    LDP)
  • Eliminate separate limit for peanuts, honey, wool
    and mohair
  • Means test (200,000 Adj Gross Income down from
    2.5 million)

22
Administrations Proposal
  • Eliminate commodity program payments on land
    acquired through a 1031 tax exchange
  • Conservation Programs
  • Provide conservation enhanced payment option
  • Option to replace commodity support payments with
    enhanced direct payments for conservation
    commitments
  • Proposed increased direct payment plus 10 percent
  • Consolidate existing cost-share programs into a
    newly designed Environmental Quality Incentives
    Program (EQIP)
  • Streamline working lands easement programs into
    one Private Lands Protection Program
  • Increase funding for the Conservation Security
    Program by 500 million

23
Administrations Proposal
  • Fruit and Vegetable Programs
  • Eliminate planting restriction
  • Provide 2.75 billion in Section 32 funds to
    purchase fruits and vegetables for food
    assistance programs
  • Provide 500 million to increase the purchase of
    fruits and vegetables in school meals
  • Provide a 250 million increase for the Market
    Access Program targeted for non-program
    commodities

24
Administrations Proposal
  • Allow for gap coverage in crop insurance
  • Energy Programs
  • Provide 1.6 billion in new funding for renewable
    energy research, development and production
  • Target cellulosic ethanol production
  • Support 2.1 billion in loan guarantees for
    cellulosic projects and 150 million in grants

25
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26
AGI Means Test for Farm Payments
  • Analyzed 64 representative crop farms over
    2008-2014 assuming continue 2002 farm bill
  • 17 of 19 feedgrain farms lose payments
  • Average of 77,750 lost payments
  • 8 of 10 wheat farms lose payments
  • Average of 33,830 lost payments
  • 16 of 20 cotton farms lose payments
  • Average of 87,730 lost payments
  • 4 of 15 rice farms lose payments
  • Average of 41,270 lost payments

27
Preliminary Look at the Administrations Proposal
for RA
  • National Target Revenue calculated
  • NTR (TP-DPrate) (2002-06 Olympic Average
    Yield)
  • Actual Target Revenue calculated
  • ATR Actual Yield MaxMarket Price, Loan Rate
  • Revenue Assurance Payment (RAP) is paid if ATR lt
    NTR
  • RAP paid per base acre is
  • RAP (NTR ATR) / (CCP Pymt Yield0.85)

28
Preliminary Results
  • Results are presented as cumulative probability
    distributions for the NTR, ATR, CCPs and RAP
    (revenue assurance payments) in 2008
  • Probabilities of CCPs and RAPs in 2008 are
    reported, as well.
  • CCPs are calculated using the formula in the 2002
    Farm Bill
  • Difference between RAP and CCP estimate the per
    acre difference in payments per base acre

29
Interpretation of the Results
  • The NTR is a constant (black line)
  • The ATR (red line) is a random variable as it
    includes risk from yield and price
  • The RAPs (blue line)
  • The CCP (green line)

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35
Administrations Proposal
  • Has never really been seriously considered in the
    past
  • Predicted to be DOA
  • Didnt happen
  • Is it going to be adopted?
  • Wont happen

36
Renewable Energy
  • Policy Stimulates Plant Development
  • Extend tax provisions beyond scheduled expiration
  • 0.51/gallon ethanol tax credit
  • 1.00/gallon subsidy for biodiesel from virgin
    vegetable oil
  • 0.54/gallon ethanol import tariff
  • Renewable Fuel Standard
  • 7.5 billion gallons of ethanol and biodiesel
    combined by 2012
  • Increase RFS to 35 billion gallons by 2017
  • Congress wont be able to help themselves
  • Good chance it will be higher
  • Other legislation could have a greater impact
  • Example Floor on oil prices (Lugar)

37
Dry Mill Returns and Operating Costs
  • After record net operating returns in 2005/06,
    returns decline
  • Given this there is projected slowing of growth
    path for ethanol production

Source FAPRI January 2007 Baseline
38
U.S. Corn Use
39
U.S. Average Corn and Soybean Expected Net
Returns
40
FAPRI U.S. Crop Acreage Projections
May be a livestock support program developed if
a lot of corn acres arent added
41
U.S. Soybean Oil Price
42
U.S. Vegetable Oil Prices
43
Getting the Farm Bill Completed is Like.
44
2007 Farm Bill
  • Only an Idiot Would Guess at Outcome soHere
    Goes
  • Less than 25 chance of having major changes in
    the structure of commodity programs
  • Ag committee leadership comfortable with
    structure
  • ButPay Go will make it more difficult given
  • Wants permanent disaster assistance (will cost
    big )
  • 05/06 disaster program
  • CSP expansion
  • MILC
  • FV funding
  • Renewable fuels

45
2007 Farm Bill
  • What About Revenue Plans?
  • Not getting any indication from staffers that
    these plans are getting serious consideration
    from Congress
  • Who would administer?
  • More likely that Farm Bill could be written on
    the floor of the House or Senate (ex. Kind
    Amendment)

46
2007 Farm Bill
  • The next bill almost certainly will have
  • More emphasis on renewable fuel research and
    development, production, and distribution
  • Some tightening of payment limitations if it
    happens will be for budget reasons
  • More emphasis on fruits and vegetables including
    market development assistance
  • More funding of conservation programs
  • To the extent these are achieved funds will
    have to come from somewhere (commodity programs)
    which will have a relatively small Baseline
  • Budget committee will TRY to add a few billion to
    Baseline

47
Conclusions
  • It is all about the Baseline
  • Cant change too much from current programs with
    limited money to spend and make everyone better
    off
  • Dont forget FV and energy spending has to come
    from somewhere
  • Bottom line
  • Very likely to have much the same programs in
    2007 FB not because thats what everyone wants
    but.. because there is not much money to spend on
    anything else
  • And a whole new group of leaders with pet
    projects

48
Thank youJoe Outlawjoutlaw_at_tamu.edu979-845-59
13
49
Index of Prices Paid for Fuel, 1998-2006 with
FAPRI Projections, 2007-2011
50
Index of Prices Paid for Fertilizer, 1998-2006
with FAPRI Projections, 2007-2011
51
Overall Economic Viability of Representative
Farms,2006 and 2011
15
Farms
19
11
20
Feed Grain
Wheat
Cotton
Rice
52
Overall Economic Viability of Representative
Dairies and Ranches,2006 and 2011
Farms
23
12
Dairies
Ranches
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