Farm subsidies, mostly in the form of price supports, have been
with us since the 1930s, but they may be going the way of the dodo
bird. Thanks to growing worldwide demand and especially China’s
expanding middle class, the price of U.S. corn and soybeans is too
high to trigger subsidies any longer.
The result is that U.S. Department of Agriculture offices
in farm states such as Illinois are as quiet as tombs these days.
Some workers fear they may be laid off (perhaps Obama’s Son of
Stimulus plan will “save” their jobs even though there is no work
to do).
China’s spreading wealth is changing diets in that
country. For example, more people are eating pork regularly. To
increase pork production, Chinese growers are using the Western
technique of feeding hogs corn. In addition, the need for
sweeteners for soft drinks, for starch, and for alcohol adds to
China’s demand for corn. Ironically, Some U.S. producers of
chickens, livestock, and ethanol are now mixing wheat with corn as
feed because it costs less. Corn prices have nearly doubled over
the last year.
For years, China was self-sufficient in corn production,
but no longer, and its appetite for U.S. corn shows no signs of
dropping off. In July it ordered 21 million bushels and another
2.2.million in August. This is more than the U.S. Department of
Agriculture had expected China to buy in an entire
year.
The U.S. exports approximately 1.8 billion bushels of corn
a year. Japan, at 610 million bushels, has been our biggest
customer; however, some experts expect China to surpass it within a
few years.
Given China’s concerns about food price inflation (which
could lead to political instability), Beijing’s government is very
likely to keep up its corn-buying pace in order to keep domestic
prices in check.
As for soybeans, China already buys about 25 percent of
our annual production.
While subsidies for these crops may become more-or-less
permanently a thing of the past, the USDA still shovels out large
sums for other subsidies, such as crop insurance and payments to
farmers for keeping erosion-vulnerable land planted in grass. The
good news is that federal farm subsidies for 2011 are predicted to
decline to $10.6 billion, less than half the 2005 figure of $24.4
billion.
Thus, we have a two-fer. China’s growing corn purchases
help balance the cost of Americans’ appetite for Chinese-made
gadgets, and our federal bill for farm subsidies is finally on a
sharp downward curve. Next, let’s see if the climate might be right
to get rid of subsidies for that useless, wasteful fuel:
ethanol.