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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (147139)5/14/2002 2:24:22 PM
From: TimF  Respond to of 1584568
 
Saving the poor rich
farmers

Brian Riedl

They may call it "farm legislation." In
reality, what Congress sent President Bush
amounts to a new welfare bill — and one with
a hefty price tag.
Signed by the president yesterday, it will,
along with last year's crop insurance bill,
provide farmers with a record $191 billion in
direct federal subsidies over the next decade.
That breaks down to an average of nearly
$4,400 per tax-paying household. (And that's
the least it would cost. New government
estimates show the total could be much
higher.)
But that isn't the only expense. The bill
continues several price-support programs that
greatly inflate certain food prices. These
programs would cost consumers $271 billion,
bringing the total cost of farm policy to $462
billion. That's more than what Congress
expects to spend on K-12 education and
environmental protection — combined — over
the next 10 years.
Worse, two-thirds of all farm subsidies go
to large farms and wealthy agri-businesses,
most of which earn more than $250,000 a year.
Among the landed gentry on the agriculture
dole: 14 members of Congress, 15 Fortune
500 companies, and celebrities such as Sam
Donaldson and Ted Turner. These
mega-corporations and multimillionaires will
rake in as much as 160 times the median
annual farm subsidy of $935.
In fact, recent studies (including one by the
General Accounting Office, the federal
government's own auditors) reveal that farm
subsidies are America's largest and most
expensive corporate welfare program.
Why have farm subsidies grown so much
— from $6 billion in 1996 to $30 billion in
2000? Because of how they were designed.
Farm subsidies are supposed to compensate
farmers for low prices caused by
overproduction, but to receive more subsidies,
farmers must plant more crops. This leads to
more overproduction, which drives prices
down further and induces calls for even larger
subsidies.
Then, while paying these farmers to grow
more crops, the federal government turns
around and pays other farmers not to farm 40
million acres — the equivalent of idling every
farm in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and
Wisconsin.
American consumers get stuck with the bill,
of course. They're forced to shell out as much
as triple the market price for some foods and
foot the bill for export subsidies so consumers
in other countries can buy our food for less
than Americans themselves pay.
Perhaps the most nonsensical of all farm
programs is the federal dairy program. In the
1930s, when most of the nation's milk was
produced in the Midwest, policymakers
worried that milk would spoil during the long
train ride to the coasts. So to encourage milk
production on the coasts, Congress mandated
that the price dairy farmers receive (and
consumers pay) would be fixed at levels that
increased the further away you got from the
Midwest.Today, however, the dairy capital of
America is California, not Wisconsin.
Milk no longer travels cross-country by
train, and 70 years of technological innovation
have decreased travel times by leaps and
bounds. Yet this Depression-era policy still
adds as much as 20 cents to the price of a
gallon of milk.
Advocates of the current farm bill say
they're just trying to help struggling family
farmers. But they could do that far more
cheaply. Congress could guarantee every
full-time farmer a minimum income of 185
percent of the federal poverty line ($32,652
for a family of four) for "only" $4 billion per
year — one-fifth the cost of direct subsidies in
the new bill.
So why would lawmakers, who are already
having a tough time funding the war on
terrorism, homeland defense and the exploding
costs of Social Security and Medicare, throw
so much money at counterproductive farm
subsidies for people who don't need them?
Because most House members have at least
one major crop in their district grown by
farmers who vote, and control of the Senate
(which overrepresents rural populations) will
depend on several close races in farm-heavy
states.
In that context, farm subsidies represent
little more than political payoffs, with both
parties bidding for the "farmer's friend" label
heading into the November elections. No one
— including President Bush, who has now
signed the bill — is putting sound policy
before irresponsible politics. Clearly his talk
of restoring fiscal sanity to Washington is
nothing more than talk.

washtimes.com