WASHINGTON, D.C., April 8, 2013 – Citing fewer federal dollars to
work with on the farm bill, the American Farm Bureau Federation is sending a
new farm bill proposal to Capitol Hill today. The package, which was approved
this weekend by the AFBF Board of Directors, is significantly different than
the “deep loss” protection proposed by the organization last year.
Specifically, the AFBF proposal calls for a three-legged safety
net for program crop farmers that includes: a stacked income protection plan
commonly called STAX; an improved crop insurance program; and target prices and
marketing loans. Under the proposal, all program crop farmers would have access
to the marketing loan and crop insurance provisions and they would then select
between a target price program and STAX to round out their safety net option.
AFBF proposes a different formula for setting target prices and
determining planted acres than that offered by the House Agriculture Committee
last year. In addition, AFBF would cover five specialty crops under the STAX
program.
The American Farm Bureau says the new farm bill proposal helps
reduce the nation’s budget deficit by saving $23 billion, compared to
continuing the current farm bill.
Because of funding limits, AFBF is proposing modifications be made
to STAX for all eligible commodities. Those modifications would: reduce the
crop insurance premium subsidization to 70 percent from 80 percent; not offer
the multiplier option; not offer a harvest price option; allow STAX to be based
on yield or revenue at the discretion of the producer; and allow purchase only
as a buy-up policy with a 10-25 percent deductible rather than also providing
for a stand-alone policy. In addition, under the STAX program suggested by Farm
Bureau, no payments would be made until the county average revenue or yield
fell by 10 percent from the historic amount.
The Farm Bureau proposal:
- Offers
farmers a choice of program options.
- Protects
and strengthens the federal crop insurance program and does not reduce its
funding.
- Provides
a commodity title that works to encourage farmers to follow market signals
rather than making planting decisions in anticipation of government
payments.
- Refrains
from basing any program on cost of production.
- And,
ensures equity across program commodities.
“There is far less money this year than last with which to secure
an adequate safety net for the many family-owned farms that make up the bulk of
America’s agricultural system,” Stallman said. “Last year, Congress merely
extended the old 2008 farm bill until Sept. 30 of this year. Now, while
unfortunately we have less money to work with, it is vital that Congress
complete a new five-year farm bill this year. Doing so is in the economic
interest of our entire nation.”
Stallman said the goal of the American Farm Bureau proposal is to
provide a measure of fairness among regions and crops, while providing each
commodity sector a workable safety net provision for farmers who grow that
crop.
“Farm policy should provide a strong and effective safety net and
viable risk management programs for farmers that do not guarantee a profit but,
instead, protect them from catastrophic occurrences,” Stallman said. “We also
want to ensure that terms of our farm programs do not affect a farmer’s
decision of which crop to plant. The program must comply with our World Trade
Organization agreements.”
Farm Bureau supports a program that reduces complexity while
allowing producers increased flexibility to plant in response to market demand.
Farm Bureau supports a safety net that allows farmers to purchase
insurance products to further protect individual risk. The program should be
delivered by private crop insurance companies.
We support producers being allowed a choice of program options.
Specifically, the AFBF proposal calls for a three-legged safety
net for program crop farmers that includes: a stacked income protection plan
commonly called STAX; an improved crop insurance program; and target prices and
marketing loans. Under the proposal, all program crop farmers would have access
to the marketing loan and crop insurance provisions and they would then select
between a target price program and STAX to round out their safety net option.
The AFBF proposal also supports extending provisions of the STAX
program for apples, potatoes, tomatoes, grapes and sweet corn. Covering these
five specialty crops will benefit fruit and vegetable producers in 44 states.
Eventually, Farm Bureau would like to cover all crops under a STAX program in
the future.
“While we would have liked to have provided a STAX program for all
commodity programs under the same terms as those provided to cotton last year
in the Senate bill, funding is insufficient to do so,” Stallman explained.
Because of funding limits, AFBF is proposing modifications be made
to STAX for all eligible commodities. Those modifications would: reduce the
crop insurance premium subsidization to 70 percent from 80 percent; not offer
the multiplier option; not offer a harvest price option; allow STAX to be based
on yield or revenue at the discretion of the producer; and allow purchase only
as a buy-up policy with a 10-25 percent deductible rather than also providing
for a stand-alone policy. In addition, under the STAX program suggested by Farm
Bureau, no payments would be made until the county average revenue or yield
fell by 10 percent from the historic amount.
A target price program for all program commodities would be
available except for cotton. Due to terms of Brazil’s WTO cotton case against
the United States, cotton farmers would likely not be eligible for a marketing
loan at the current level or any target price.
For other crops, target price levels would be based on the
marketing-year average price from the past five years (2007 through 2011) and
those projected by the Congressional Budget Office for the next five years
(2012 through 2016). To establish the actual target prices and provide general
equity across crop sectors, these 2007-2016 average prices are reduced by 25
percent for corn and soybeans, 15 percent for wheat and 10 percent for rice and
peanuts. Wheat has an adjustment of only 15 percent because it is produced
mostly in the larger counties, making area yields less representative of
individual producer experience and therefore less effective as a risk
management tool.
The smaller 10 percent adjustment is applied to peanuts and rice
as both crops lack insurance products that function as well as those available
to the major grain and oilseed commodities. AFBF suggests the same 10 percent
loss threshold be used to determine appropriate target price levels for rice
and peanuts.
The target price will be based on 85 percent of planted acres, but
not to exceed a producer's historical base acreage. This provides a safety net
more accurately addressing the risks associated with current production
decisions and eliminates the present mismatch between payments and actual
production or market conditions. Capping the payment acres at the historical
base minimizes any potential distortion of a target price system.
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