by Baylen Linnekin
On Monday, Politico reported
that farm "lobbyists have been laboring for months" to try to secure
tens of millions of dollars in federal aid for their members, who are
struggling thanks to a combination of overproduction and low commodity
prices.
We're "pushing both Congress and the USDA to assist producers," said
Zack Clark, a lobbyist for the National Farmers Union, to Politico.
In addition to the NFU, those who've been shaking cups in the
nation's capital include lobbyists from the American Farm Bureau and the
National Milk Producers Federation. The aid they've sought centers on
increasing the amount of wheat present in shipments of foreign food aid,
expanding loans to farmers, and getting more cash in the hands of dairy
producers.
By Tuesday, aid for dairy farmers was already a done deal. All that
vigorous cup-shaking had turned into $20 million in USDA purchases of
surplus cheese. That's on top of the $11 million in additional support for dairy producers the USDA announced earlier this month.
"That's mad cheese," writes the Arizona Republic's Louie Villalobos.
Mad cheese. And madness.
This news is as awful as it is timely. In fact, it's practically ripped out of the pages of my book, Biting the Hands that Feed Us: How Fewer, Smarter Laws Would Make Our Food System More Sustainable, which is being published on September 15. (Pre-order here!)
In Chapter 2, "'Big Food' Bigger Thanks to 'Big Government,'" I
recount the many ways the government generally—and, often, the USDA
specifically—wrongly aids and abets large-scale food producers. Examples
include USDA farm subsidies, marketing orders, and checkoff programs.
But the USDA's habitual purchase of excessive animal agriculture
products is one key misuse of agency funds that's often underreported.
Yet for foods like milk that are subject to a tangled web of USDA
rules that seek to promote and manage supply and demand, begging for a
handout from the USDA in times of low prices or excess supply (or, as
now, both) has become the norm. And that begging is often rewarded.
Still, it would be unfair to single out the dairy industry.
"In 2011, for example, the USDA purchased $40 million of excess
poultry in an effort to aid large poultry producers," I write in Biting the Hands that Feed Us.
"Two years earlier, the agency bought up a similar amount of pork 'to
boost America's hog farmers.' [...] In fact, the USDA regularly spends
millions of dollars each year to prop up animal agriculture producers.
In 2009, according to the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine,
a pro-vegan group, the USDA spent more than $1.7 billion to buy surplus
dairy, beef, eggs, pork, and poultry. Paul Shapiro, vice president for
farm animal welfare with the Humane Society of the United States, told
me those industries often try to keep government at arm's length, but
when they 'suffer from lack of demand, their clamor for government aid
is stark.'"
Shapiro's words are echoed by Daren Bakst, a research fellow in agricultural policy with the Heritage Foundation.
"Unlike for other businesses, existing policy seeks to protect
farmers from market forces, such as lower prices," said Bakst, in an
email to me this week. "When the failed and overgenerous policies aren't
generous enough, agriculture lobbies come looking for more taxpayer
dollars."...
Baylen J. Linnekin is a food lawyer and an adjunct professor at George
Mason University Law School, where he teaches Food Law & Policy. Visit his website here.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Sunday, August 28, 2016
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
Is this a battle in the war on farmers that Donald Trump is talking about? Frank, the only consistent message your blog conveys is anti-Federal sentiment. What accounts for it, I don't know. Mexico is not far from you, perhaps you would find things more to your liking south of the border.
Post a Comment