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There is a
strong and growing possibility that replacement legislation for the expiring
2002 Farm Bill, already deeply entangled in fierce partisan politics,
could significantly change US agricultural and trade policies in a number of
ways. At least some of those could be detrimental to the long-term
economic health of our industry.
Background
As replacement legislation for the expiring 2002
farm bill is considered this year and next, the United States must
simultaneously deal with record-high budget deficits, severe terrorist threats
in the Middle-East and at home and very difficult trade negotiations that
could either open growing world markets—or, end in stalemate. At least four
major forces will affect the final shape of the bill that likely will be
adopted in 2007, including:
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growing
budget concerns, including intense competition for resources for the war on
terror, homeland security, social programs including Social Security,
Medicare and Medicaid—and, for additional tax cuts. In this context, farm
program spending is small but important.
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tough
negotiations by trading partners who are skillfully using litigation,
complex alliances and sophisticated bargaining tactics. Concessions will be
demanded concerning export subsidies, domestic supports, additional market
access and, possibly, sanitary-phytosanitary measures in return for
increased access to their growing markets.
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powerful
rural and urban coalitions who demand more extensive and more effective
protections for soil, water and air quality, as well as more protections for
animal welfare, but who may be willing to use working farms as a central
feature of their ideal system.
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growing
demands for equity across agriculture from increasingly insistent groups who
make up the 68% of US farmers not now eligible for program benefits.
Already, lines are being drawn with the chief
beneficiaries of current programs mobilizing in their support while others
such as farmers in the non-supported sectors and conservationists organize to
support change. A potentially important difference this time is that the urban
press that helped reinforce the price anxiety leading up to the 2002 bill now
believes that those policies have been damaging to developing countries and
will be critical of efforts to extend them.
The most important unknown in the debate is the
administration’s priorities. So far, the new Secretary of Agriculture—former
Governor Mike Johanns of Nebraska—is hanging tough on the administration’s
extensive but modest proposals for cuts for FY2006. If the administration does
not prevail in this year’s budget skirmishes, it is likely that the current
program structure will be continued largely in its present form once Congress
focuses on the reauthorization debate, likely next year.
Even that scenario would imply some tweaking, of
course, to make the existing programs WTO-compliant. Most analysts thought the
direct payment programs were Green-Box, but the recent WTO Appellate Body
decision on cotton says that they are not. To make them so would mean changes
that vegetable growers and others can be expected to oppose. The
administration must either come to grips with that reality or attempt to
change WTO’s Green Box definition, a really tall order.
It also must decide how far to go toward
restructuring the remaining supply-control programs for dairy and sugar and
how to modify the cotton, rice and soybean programs to fully meet WTO rules.
And, overall, the United States like the EU and
others must decide how important more liberal trade really is in the current
economic and political environment and how willing it is to concede the sharp
reductions in domestic supports developing countries are demanding as the
price of opening their markets.
Please join us in a comprehensive multi-client
study of the context of the coming debate and its likely impact on US and
world agriculture.
The
entire prospectus in pdf form

For
more information, e-mail
info@informaecon.com....
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