Food Fight: A Citizen's Guide to the Farm Bill — Overview
Every five years, Congress revisits and passes a massive but
little understood legislation known as the Farm Bill. This year
will be one of those years, and if things play out the way they’re
headed, this could become the most scrutinized food and farm
policy debate in recent history. Originally conceived as an emergency
bailout for millions of farmers and unemployed during the dark
times of the Dust Bowl and Great Depression, the Farm Bill has
snow-balled into one of the most — if not the most — significant
forces affecting food, farming, and land-use in the United States.
In a country consecrated to private property rights and free
market ideals, it might seem hard to fathom that a single legislation
could wield such far-reaching influence. But to a large extent,
the Farm Bill determines what sort of foods we Americans eat
(and how they taste and how much they cost), which crops are
grown under what conditions, and, ultimately, whether we’re
properly nourished or not.
Why the Farm Bill Matters
If you pay taxes, care about the nutritional value of school
lunches, worry about biodiversity or the loss of farmland and
open space, you have a personal stake in the tens of billions
of dollars committed annually to agriculture and food policies.
If you’re concerned about escalating federal budget deficits,
the fate of family farmers, a food system dominated by corporations
and commodities, conditions of immigrant farm workers, the state
of the country’s woodlands, or the marginalization of locally
raised organic food and grass-fed meat and dairy products, you
should pay attention to the Farm Bill. The dozens of other reasons
the Farm Bill is critical to our land, our bodies, and our children’s
future include:
- The twilight of the cheap oil age and onset of unpredictable
climatic conditions;
- Looming water shortages and crashing fish populations;
- Broken rural economies;
- Euphoria over corn and soybean expansion for biofuels;
- Escalating medical and economic costs of child and adult obesity;
- Record payouts to corporate farms that aren’t even losing money;
- Over 35 million Americans, half of them children, who don’t
get enough to eat.
“The farm policies we design now will likely determine
whether we will continue to have a sustainable food system in
the future,” writes longtime North Dakota organic farmer
and food activist Fred Kirschenmann, in the introduction to Food
Fight: The Citizen’s Guide to a Food and Farm Bill.
Although the economic challenges of modern agriculture may seem
abstract to many urban and suburban residents, he argues, “an
enlightened food and farm policy is of considerable consequence
to every citizen on the planet.” We all do have to eat,
after all.
What Is the Farm Bill?
The Farm Bill is primarily accountable for the USDA’s annual
$90 billion spending programs for food, feed, fiber, and
fuel. Each bill receives a formal name, such as the Food
and Agriculture Act of 1977, the Federal Agriculture Improvement
and Reform Act of 1996 (a.k.a. “Freedom to Farm”),
but more often each act is simply referred to as “the Farm
Bill.”
While many people equate its programs and subsidies with assistance
for struggling family farmers, the Farm Bill actually has two
primary thrusts: (1) Food stamps and nutrition programs;
and (2) income and price supports for a number of storable commodity
crops. In addition, the Farm Bill funds a range of other program “titles,” including
conservation and environment, forestry, renewable energy, research,
and rural development.
For decades, Farm Bill negotiations have been dominated by a tag-team
of two powerful interest groups. The “farm bloc” (representatives
from commodity states along with the agribusiness lobby) has orchestrated
a quid pro quo with the antihunger caucus (urban representatives
aligned with hunger advocacy groups). As a result, ever-increasing
payments have been successfully directed toward surplus commodity
production and the livestock feedlot industry. In return, the Farm
Bill’s desperately needed hunger safety net programs have
survived relatively unscathed.
Who Gets the Money?
For the simplest answer, one might twist a line from Bill Clinton’s 1992 campaign,
“It’s the commodity groups‚ stupid.” Thanks to a growing number of nongovernmental,
governmental, and mass media resources, following the Farm Bill money trail is not that difficult.
(Excellent places to start include Environmental Working Group, Oxfam International, Sustainable
Agriculture Coalition, Washington Post, and Atlanta Journal-Constitution.) According to the
Congressional Research Service, 84 percent of commodity support spending goes to the production of
just five crops: corn, cotton, wheat, rice, and soybeans. Half of that money currently goes to just
seven states that produce most of those commodities. The richest ten percent of farm-subsidy recipients
(many of whom are corporations and absentee landowners who can hardly be classified as “actively engaged ” in growing crops) take in more than two-thirds of those payments.
A few other broad brushstrokes:
- Almost 50 percent of all commodity subsidies went to 5 percent
of eligible farmers in 2005.
- Subsidies help the largest farms to acquire the best land and squeeze
out smaller growers.
- The growth rate for jobs trailed the national average in nearly two-thirds
of counties receiving heavy subsidies between 2000 and 2003, according
to a recent report.
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January 2007
184 pages, 8 1/2” x 9”
Two 8-page color photo essays
More than 30 charts and illustrations, resource list, photos
Written by Daniel Imhoff
Designed by Roberto Carra
Foreward by Michael Pollan
Introduction by Fred Kirschenmann
A Watershed Media book
ISBN-0-9709500-2-0
US $16.95
BUY NOW
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What about the Food Pyramid?
Very little of the agriculture we subsidize is directly edible, at least by humans.
Out of the hundreds and even thousands of plant and animal species that have
been cultivated for human use, the Farm Bill favors just four primary groups:
food grains, feed grains, oilseeds, and upland cotton. Most are either fed
to cattle in confinement or processed into oils, flours, starches, sugars,
industrial food additives, and, increasingly biofuels.
It only takes a stroll down the supermarket aisles to understand how
Farm Bill dollars flow into the country’s food chain. A dollar
buys hundreds of more calories in the snack food, cereal, or soda aisles
than it does in the produce section. Why? Because the Farm Bill favors
the mega-production of corn (resulting in cheap high-fructose corn
syrup) and soybeans rather than regional supplies of healthy vegetables,
fruits, and nuts. Unfortunately, eating a diet high in calories doesn’t
necessarily ensure that one is well-fed — even if that food is
cheap.
While the USDA’s Food Pyramid emphasizes the nutritional advantages
of five daily servings of fruits and vegetables, Farm Bill funding
for diversified row crop and orchard farming remains relatively disconnected
from the balanced, healthy diet that professional nutritionists endorse.
Meanwhile, most consumer food dollars spent in farm country end up
leaving the region because our agricultural areas have effectively
become “food deserts.” There is at least one simple solution
to this. Farm and food subsidy programs could be realigned to support
the federal dietary guidelines and reoriented toward food chains that
produce and distribute locally grown, healthy foods.
A Food and Farm Bill for the 21st Century?
The silver lining is that Americans actually do have a substantially
large food and farm policy program to debate. Conditions for change
have perhaps never been better, as market dynamics and public awareness
rapidly align to create uncertainty about farm politics as usual.
Indeed, the Farm Bill matters because it can actually serve as the
economic engine driving small-scale entrepreneurship, on-farm research,
species protection, nutritional assistance, school lunches made from
scratch, regional development, and habitat restoration, to name just
a few.
Our challenge may not be to abolish government supports altogether,
but to ensure that those subsidies we do choose to legislate actually
serve as valuable investments in the country’s future and allow
us to live up to our obligations in the global community. How we get
there is still to be determined. But most observers agree that the
era of massive giveaways to corporations and surplus commodity producers
must yield to policies that reward stewardship, promote healthy diets,
secure regional economies, and do no harm to family farms or hungry
kids and their families.
“Today, because so few realize that we citizens have a dog in this
fight,” writes Michael Pollan in his excellent foreword to Food
Fight, “our legislators feel free to leave the debate over
the Farm Bill to the farm states, very often trading their votes on agricultural
policy for votes on issues that matter more to their constituents. But
nothing could do more to reform America’s food system, and by doing
so, improve the condition of America’s environment and public health,
than if the rest of us were to weigh in.”
Excerpted
from Food Fight: The Citizen's Guide to a Food and Farm Bill by
Daniel Imhoff, ©2007 Watershed Media, distributed by University
of California Press. |
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