Admin. Backs Phasing Crop
Subsidies
The
Associated Press
Oct. 18, 2001
WASHINGTON –– A farm program overhaul proposal
that would phase out crop subsidies, double spending on conservation and pay
farmers to act to reduce their financial risk received the Bush
administration's endorsement.
Opponents labeled it a bad deal for many farmers.
"It would be a drastic, devastating cut for farmers in our part of the
country," said Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D.
The plan by Sen. Dick Lugar, R-Ind., would reduce assistance to grain and
cotton growers and give money to farms that raise fruit, vegetables and
livestock. Those operations now get little, if any, subsidies.
Instead of crop subsidies, farmers could get money to buy insurance policies
that protect them against drops in revenue.
"This is a thoughtful piece of legislation and is consistent with the
president's principles," Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman said.
The Bush administration says existing programs encourage excess production
and primarily benefit big farms that need help the least.
Lugar's five-year plan would cost about $82 billion, the maximum that the
White House wants to spend. A bill passed by the House earlier this month would
extend farm programs for 10 years and cost $170 billion.
Lugar's plan would increase spending on conservation programs by $9.4
billion over the five-year period and expand the food stamp program at a cost
of $3.4 billion.
Almost any farm could qualify for vouchers to buy income insurance or to
match deposits in IRA-type savings accounts under the proposal. The payments
also could be used for various marketing contracts. For example, a farm that
traditionally has $100,000 in annual gross revenue, including government
payments, would get a payment of $6,000.
"Farmers in every state, every county, every neighborhood would share
alike," said Lugar, who owns a corn and soybean farm in Indiana.
Under existing farm programs, the bulk of federal subsidies goes to large
farms where corn, wheat, rice, cotton and soybeans are grown. Those crops
account for 20 percent of the nation's agricultural output.
The Senate Agriculture Committee, on which Lugar is the senior Republican,
is expected to begin working on a farm bill next week. The White House has
urged Congress to wait until next year to finish the legislation. Existing
programs expire in September 2002.
Veneman spokesman Kevin Herglotz said she would work with other senators on
proposals. "We want to build consensus," Herglotz said.
"The Lugar bill is a much fairer deal for taxpayers and family farmers
and ranchers and gives conservation and food assistance programs the prominence
they deserve," said Kenneth Cook, president of the Environmental Working
Group, a research and advocacy organization.