By Manon McKinnon on 11.20.07 @ 12:07AM
Why do we need yet another farm bill?
It's farm bill time in Congress and I have to tell you I don't
like it. I don't like it for all the usual reasons -- farm supports
are a relic of the Depression; most foods don't get and don't need
subvention; subsidies make food prices higher, etc. And for some
other reasons such as the attitudes of entitlement and dependency
that welfare engenders in everyone, including farmers. That
attitude found its poster boy in "Tractor Man," the famous farmer
who, in 2003, shut down traffic in Washington, D.C. for three days
by driving his tractor onto the National Mall and threatening to
blow it up. Tractor Man wanted more money -- but then who doesn't
-- and I'm betting that he gets more of yours and mine than we
know.
That brings me to the heart of my farm subsidy objections. My
own rich relative gets a farm subsidy! This relative, who is a fine
fellow in every way, has never so much as planted a seed or watered
a plant. Well, maybe he has turned on the lawn sprinkler from time
to time. But surrounding his vacation home are fields planted in
subsidized crops. As the landlord of these fields, my rich relative
collects a cut of the subsidy check. I don't mind seeing a tax
payer get something back, but just lowering his taxes would work
better.
Back in 1996 Congress took a stab at doing something about the
farm fiasco that took significant steps in the right direction.
They called it the Freedom to Farm Act, and the first thing you
need to know about it is that it didn't last. Here is how that
happened as explained by John Frydenlund in "The Erosion of Freedom to Farm."
The legislation had barely gone into effect when the
opponents of reform began their efforts to repeal the changes it
brought, or at least to lay the groundwork for a return to the
status quo.
Although opponents of the reform legislation were disgruntled
because it reduced the level of government control over the
nation's agriculture industry, once the bill was passed, most
farmers supported the flexibility it provided. Within two years,
however, the bill's benefits were dimmed by worldwide economic
problems and weather-related disasters in the United States.
This provided the opening that opponents of reform had been
seeking -- an economic downturn in the farm economy that they could
pin on freedom to farm. A return to subsidy-laden government
micromanagement of agriculture quickly followed.
Of course there was declared to be a "farm crisis" -- there always
is a "farm crisis." And then comes "emergency relief" until once
again, to the tune of almost $280-plus billion, we are headed
toward more Washington management of U.S. agriculture through a
combination of subsidies, commodity supply and price controls,
acreage allotments, production quotas, and restrictions on imports,
and export subsidies.
All this leaves me asking myself why do we need a farm bill? Why
do we feel the need to save the family farm and feel no need to
save the family restaurant or the family gas station or the family
dry cleaner? My own unpopular idea is that farms should succeed or
fail the way other businesses do -- on their own -- as is the
American standard. But in this Congress, that idea is unpopular
indeed.
topics:
Taxes, Business, Law