ABC Money
Home

Major farm bill divides lawmakers, Bush


Published :
Sun, 14 Jan 2007 19:40
By : Agencies
Print this Story


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

WASHINGTON (AFX) - Lawmakers begin work on a new multibillion-dollar farm bill at odds with President Bush over whether big changes really are needed.

The two sides are far apart. Just how far, farmers saw for themselves during the American Farm Bureau Federation's recent meeting in Salt Lake City.

'I think the bill could look a lot like what we have now. What I think we are going to end up doing, you could say, is extending the farm bill,' Rep. Collin Peterson, D-Minn., chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, told farmers.

Contrast that with Bush's agriculture secretary, Mike Johanns, who said at the meeting that farm programs need an overhaul.

'I will be the first to argue that the 2002 farm bill was good policy for its time,' Johanns said. 'But the agricultural and economic realities that influenced the development of the '02 farm bill -- they simply don't exist.'

The farm bill -- really a series of federal programs -- gives farmers payments and other help to supplement their incomes, support crop prices and manage supplies.

Near $18 billion in public money was spent on these programs last year. The current farm bill, written in 2002, expires at the end of this year.

Congress and the administration disagree mightily on what the new farm bill should look like.

Which side is closer to the wishes of Farm Bureau, the biggest general-interest agriculture group?

Right now, probably the House Agriculture Committee chairman, said Bob Stallman, the organization's president. Johanns advocated massive changes, Stallman said.

'That, frankly, is not what our delegates are saying,' he said.

Not that farmers are in lock step.

Illinois delegate Dale Hadden wants changes in farm programs and liked what Johanns said. With the Illinois River just a few miles from Hadden's corn and soybean fields, he ships most of his crop to the Gulf Coast to be exported.

'If we are going to be a player in international trade markets, we need to be sure we don't run into a lot of problems,' Hadden said.

Among the disagreements are:

--Trade. The U.S. and other rich countries are under pressure from around the world to reduce their farm subsidies. Conflict over the issue led to the collapse last summer of World Trade Organization talks.

Without an agreement, American farmers face high tariffs and other barriers when they sell crops abroad -- and they export a big chunk of their products.

Against this backdrop, Johanns has pushed for change as U.S. farm programs themselves come under fire. The WTO, in a case brought by Brazil, has ruled that some cotton subsidies are illegal. Canada is pursing a complaint about U.S. corn subsidies.

'Now of course the temptation may be to say to the WTO, 'You know what, folks? Take a hike,'' Johanns told farmers.

'Now, surely there are people in this room who grow rice,' he said. 'Fifty percent of the rice that you grow goes into the international market. Do you want us to ignore the WTO and jeopardize that market?'

Some farmers do want to ignore the trade issue. Johanns drew a smattering of unexpected applause at the idea of telling the WTO to take a hike.

Peterson, too, is disinclined to worry too much about the WTO.

'I want to write a farm bill that's good for agriculture,' he said. 'If somebody wants to sue us, we have got a lot of lawyers in Washington.'

--Cost: There probably will be fewer dollars for farm programs when Congress writes the latest bill. The Democratic-run Congress is insisting on budget cuts to pay for new spending, and Bush has pledged to balance the budget in five years.

Johanns seems to be preparing lawmakers to do more with less. High subsidies, he told Farm Bureau members, do not necessarily equal a strong farm economy.

At the same time, Peterson argues against reducing farm spending. That is a tough sell because the farm bill has cost billions of dollars less than lawmakers thought it would.

Peterson says agriculture somehow should be credited for wise spending. 'We feel like we have done our part,' Peterson said. 'I'm not going to say this is going to be easy, but we feel like we are going to be able to get the resources.'

Peterson also wants to include a permanent disaster aid program in the farm bill; Congress has considered drought and hurricane aid separately. But Farm Bureau delegates voted against such a program because they worried it could take money away from other farm spending.

--Payment limits: Johanns favors ending practices that allow some growers to collect millions of dollars annually above the $350,000 limit on payments.

He has broad support in Congress -- except from Southerners, who would feel limits more keenly because their cotton and rice crops, cost more to grow and get higher subsidies.

Peterson said a farm bill cannot pass without support from Southern lawmakers.

'I'm not interested in putting our agriculture friends in the South in trouble. They have got enough problems,' he said.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.




Share on


 You Might Like
New farm bill divides Bush and lawmakers
Ag secretary: Farm policy must shift
+
House passes minimum wage increase
House Dems move to boost minimum wage

Comment on this Article
Comment:
Title:
Name:
Please Enter
 
Here
  

 Search News

 Look For
Business
Credit cards
Finance
Loans
Money
Mortgages

 
 Stock Quotes *
SYMBOL
LAST
CHANGE
DOW JONES
10340.69
-107.24 ( -1.03 %)
NASDAQ
2792.28
22.57 ( 0.81 %)
FTSE 100
5741.15
38.78 ( 0.68 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
STANDARD CHARTERED ( 11:35am )
1559.00
70.00 ( 4.76 %)
WOLSELEY PLC ( 11:35am )
2250.00
70.00 ( 3.20 %)
CARNIVAL ( 11:35am )
2017.00
46.00 ( 2.42 %)
LAND SECURITIES GROUP ( 11:35am )
679.50
36.50 ( 5.63 %)
WHITBREAD ( 11:35am )
1662.99
33.99 ( 2.09 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
3M COMPANY ( 12:34pm )
85.78
0.71 ( 0.83 %)
BOEING CO ( 12:34pm )
75.70
0.64 ( 0.85 %)
JP MORGAN CHASE CO ( 12:34pm )
37.03
0.49 ( 1.33 %)
WAL MART STORES ( 12:34pm )
60.44
0.43 ( 0.72 %)
IBM ( 12:34pm )
181.50
0.43 ( 0.24 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
F5 NETWORKS INC ( 12:11pm )
122.38
13.92 ( 11.80 %)
ICO GLOBAL COMM CL A ( 8:01pm )
99999999.99
9.37 ( 366.02 %)
PRICELINECOM INC ( 12:23pm )
525.40
6.57 ( 1.26 %)
AMAZONCOM INC ( 12:04pm )
195.65
6.21 ( 3.25 %)
MILLICOM INTERNATIONAL CELLULAR SA ( 4:00pm )
110.18
4.82 ( 4.43 %)

Gainers & Losers
Dow Jones
Euro Stoxx 50
FTSE 100
FTSE 250
FTSE AIM
FTSE ALL
Nasdaq

 Portfolio Manager

You must log in to access this area of the site. If you are not a registered user click here to sign up for instant access!


 Finance Explained

Money making ideas

Save money

Money management
Savings accounts
Investing money
Share dealing
Stock broker
Forex currency trading
Pension plans
Functions of Money

(c) 2007 ABCmoney.co.uk, All Rights Reserved
*ABCMoney.co.uk does not guarantee the accuracy of any share prices or stock quotations displayed. These are not real time quotes; all are delayed by at least twenty minutes and are for information purposes only.