Skip over navigation to main content
Go to the USDA HomepageGo to the USDA HomepageGo to the RMA HomepageGo to the RMA HomepageRMA Banner
RMA Banner
HomeContact UsField Offices News Opportunities Publications Help Contact Us
 
Search RMA
 
Browse by Subject
Actuarial Documents
Bulletins and Handbooks
Crop Policies
Participation Data
Federal Crop Insurance Corportation
Laws and Regulations
Livestock
Pilots
Reinsurance Agreements
State Profiles
Tools and Calculators

Publications
Building a Risk Management Plan Weighing Farm Bill Impact: The World According to Flinchbaugh

"A $4 billion ag budget won"t buy a large farm program. Producers must come to grips with this reality, and acquire the skills needed to manage risk."

The 1996 Farm Bill will soon come under official scrutiny. Not only by a multitude of farmers, bureaucrats and ag advisors, but by the Commission on 21st Century Production Agriculture. The Commission was mandated by the Federal Agricultural Improvement and Reform Act (FAIR) to review the impacts of the legislation and to make recommendations for future agriculture policy.

According to Barry Flinchbaugh, a Kansas State Research and Extension economist, “the commission will assess the ways in which production flexibility contracts have served American farmers; the economic risks that small, medium and large farm operators face; the security of the nation’s food supply; farmland values and farm income; the success of ag regulatory relief and tax relief for farmers; and federal interference in ag export markets.

“Our first analysis will set the stage for our second mission,” said Flinchbaugh. “That mission is to review the past, present and future of U.S. production agriculture and assess and determine the proper role for the federal government.”

Initially, the Commission will consider five options:

  1. continuing Freedom to Farm beyond 2002 with a $4 billion baseline budget,
  2. ending federal farm programs altogether,
  3. reverting to a 1990 style farm bill,
  4. installing a completely new farm program that likely would be based on revenue-based insurance plans, and
  5. reverting to the 1949 Agricultural Act.

“We won’t really know how to judge Freedom to Farm until 2000, when program payments decline significantly,” Flinchbaugh said. “This Commission isn’t going to focus strictly on Freedom to Farm. We are going to conduct an analysis of all available farm policy options. This isn’t going to be a political road show.

“A $4 billion ag budget won’t buy a large farm program. Producers must come to grips with this reality, and acquire the skills needed to manage risk.”

Previous Section ArrowPrevious Section | Contents Page | Next SectionNext Section Arrow


Last Modified: 05/03/2007
RMA Home | USDA.gov | Civil Rights | Report Fraud | Copyright Information | Jobs | Site Map | A-Z Index
FOIA | Accessibility Statement | Privacy Policy | Non-Discrimination Statement | Information Quality | USA.gov | White House