Corn Growers Say Work Paid Off
April 29, 2002
The National Corn Growers Association (NCGA) says it "pressed hard for a stronger counter-cyclical program to be the centerpiece of a new farm safety net and its work was rewarded". Seventy-two days following passage of the Senate farm bill, the House and Senate conferees "have finally come to an agreement that will shape the nation's farm policy for the next six years," said NCGA.
In early April, a "significant breakthrough occurred" when the House conferees
embraced the Senate's concept of updating yields in the counter-cyclical payment that recognizes the considerable changes in crop production since the mid 1980s," said NCGA. "Conventional wisdom just weeks ago suggested the final farm bill would not include a yield update for the counter-cyclical program. Subsequent modifications in the yield update provision have helped to ensure more equitable treatment of producers between various regions and commodities."
NCGA also supported the House bill's continuation of level, decoupled fixed payments and a marketing loan program that would minimize government influence on planting decisions. In the end, House and Senate conferees struck a compromise on the commodity title with significant increases in marketing loan rates that are reduced after the first two years.
The corn loan rate will rise to $1.98/bu and decline to $1.95/bu, a change that will
simultaneously increase the counter-cyclical program's payment rate. Target prices
for the counter-cyclical program will be confirmed following a scoring of the bill's costs by the Congressional Budget Office.
In another significant farm policy decision, the conferees agreed to more restrictive payment limitations: $40,000 on fixed payments, $65,000 on the counter-cyclical program, and $75,000 for combined loan deficiency payments and marketing loan gains. The three-entity rule and generic certificates would remain in place. House-Senate conferees settled on a total payment cap of $360,000, a sharp reduction from current levels.