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January 5-8, 2007 So Why Are There Farm Bills? Daryll E. Ray Blasingame Chair of Excellence Agricultural Policy Analysis Center University of Tennessee.

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Presentation on theme: "January 5-8, 2007 So Why Are There Farm Bills? Daryll E. Ray Blasingame Chair of Excellence Agricultural Policy Analysis Center University of Tennessee."— Presentation transcript:

1 January 5-8, 2007 So Why Are There Farm Bills? Daryll E. Ray Blasingame Chair of Excellence Agricultural Policy Analysis Center University of Tennessee

2 Ag Policy Did Not Start in 1932  Historic policy of plenty  Land distribution mechanisms – 1620 onward  Canals, railroads, farm to market roads  Land Grant Colleges – 1862, 1890, 1994  Experiment Stations - 1887  Cooperative Extension Service – 1914  This policy of plenty often results in production outstripping demand

3 Characteristics of Ag Sector  Agriculture is different from other economic sectors. On the demand side:  With low food prices—  People don’t eat more meals a day  They may change mix of foods  Aggregate intake remains relatively stable

4 Characteristics of Ag Sector  Agriculture is different from other economic sectors. On the supply side:  With low crop prices—  Farmers continue to plant all their acres  Farmers don’t and “can’t afford to” reduce their application of fertilizer and other major yield- determining inputs  Who farms land may change  Essential resource—land—remains in production in short- to medium-run

5 When Policy of Plenty is Too Much  Given agriculture’s inability to quickly adjust to overproduction and low prices, there are 3 policy strategies:  Supply side  Demand side  Just pay money

6 Exports, Exports, Exports  For the last quarter century, exports have been heralded—and continue to be by some—as agriculture’s salvation  Exports is the production safety valve that can rebalance agricultural markets  Exports will grow at accelerating rates  As Dr. Phil would say, “So, how has that been workin’ for ya?”

7 What about Exports? Billion Dollars Bulk Exports Total Agricultural Exports

8 What about Exports? Index of US Population, US Demand for 8 Crops and US Exports* of 8 Crops 1979=1.0 US Population US Exports US Domestic Demand *Adjusted for grain exported in meat

9 What about Exports? Dollars per Bushel Corn Exports Corn Price Thousand Metric Tons

10 What About Exports?  Why have exports not fulfilled our hopes?  Export demand is braked by issues of food security/food sovereignty  International crop production is impacted by  Increased acreage: Stage of development  Yield advances: World-wide distribution of technology  US role as the leading nation in the world  Politically, economically, technologically, and militarily  And in prices too: Others price off US prices

11 Implications for the WTO  Market access may not be sufficient  May benefit beef and Anjou pears  What about crops covered by the Farm Bill?

12 What about Exports? Developing competitors: Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Pakistan, Thailand, Vietnam 15 Crops: Wheat, Corn, Rice, Sorghum, Oats, Rye, Barley, Millet, Soybeans, Peanuts, Cottonseed, Rapeseed, Sunflower, Copra, and Palm Kernel Thousand Metric Tons US Developing Competitors

13 Questions to Ask  When you are provided with an ag policy proposal ask yourself:  Does this proposal take into account the behavior of consumers both domestic and foreign?  Does this proposal take into account what we know about the behavior of producers?

14 Decoupled/Direct Payments  Examine these using the test I have suggested:  Direct payments—  Do not affect consumer behavior  Do not result in increased exports  Do not result in fewer planted acres when prices are low  Are paid out even when farm prices and income are high  Same is paid when prices are in the tank

15 In Times of Exploding Demand  The current program will work  Environmental payments will work  Rural developments will work  Any farm program will work  NO program at all will work  But times of exploding demand always come to an end

16 What Does Agriculture Need?  A “Policy for All Seasons”  Realistic about the way aggregate agricultural markets work  Takes into account consumer behavior  Takes into account producer behavior  Recognizes limited ability of exports to rebalance aggregate agricultural markets  Recognizes demand growth seldom outstrips supply growth for long

17 Thank You Agricultual Policy Analysis Center WWW.agpolicy.org dray@utk.edu WWW.agpolicy.org


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