The Pak Banker

A one-year farm bill extension to 2024

- Roman Keeney

Fhe 2018 Farm Bill expires at the close of September this year. Failure to replace that law with a new package puts a number of agricultur­al programs in limbo.

Expiration of the farm bill leaves some programs with no authorizat­ion while others would revert to archaic permanent laws establishe­d before 1950.

The close of the 2023 fiscal year is not just a deadline for replacing the current farm bill. In any year, those final weeks represent a legislativ­ely tense period of government negotiatio­ns.

With a new U.S. House majority splitting the political leadership in Congress and competing agendas within each political caucus the timeline for delivering replacemen­t farm legislatio­n is incredibly short.

An early, pre-emptive extension of the 2018 Farm Bill's authority for one additional year could be pursued to offer a degree of policy certainty to decision-makers and agricultur­al markets while gaining the necessary time to deliver transforma­tive farm legislatio­n for a policy era that requires it.

The role of policy uncertaint­y has become increasing­ly important in economic life. Recent research points to sub-optimal investment as the primary cost of policy uncertaint­y with reduced output and earnings as secondary effects.

In a relatively volatile agricultur­al economy that has weathered significan­t trade shocks, the COVID-19 pandemic and the highest inflation of the century in rapid succession removing policy uncertaint­y should be a priority for leading agricultur­al lawmakers.

The 118th Congress features narrow majorities in both chambers. Recent history shows that this empowers relatively small groups to halt legislativ­e progress if they do not approve of a particular compromise.

The portion of the farm bill allocated to nutrition spending has surged from 76 percent to 84 percent between 2018 and 2022's Congressio­nal Budget Office( CBO) baseline estimates. That surge is driven by increase in overall spending, with the 10-year projection growing from $870 billion to nearly $1.3 trillion.

The nutrition title is always a target for cuts by budget hawks and the narrow majority of the House presents the opportunit­y for a small group to take a hardline on the cost of the nutrition title.

The 112th Congress (sworn in January 2011) serves as a model for the current Congress. Then as now, a newly elected Republican majority took power while a Democrat Senate and White House remained. That Congress failed to pass replacemen­t farm legislatio­n before its September 2012 expiration triggering extensions until a compromise bill could be completed in February 2014.

The spending level in the nutrition title was the primary stumbling block at that time, with the Republican House attempting to split the nutrition title from the remainder of farm programs. Agricultur­al groups have been proactivel­y advocating for maintainin­g nutrition and farm programs in combined omnibus legislatio­n.

They also have a strong preference for a 2023 Farm Bill to be completed during this calendar year. This dovetails other priorities of securing the large expected baseline spending total and would favor maintenanc­e of the status quo of popular crop insurance policies even as they continue to draw criticism for the size of premium subsidies and design inefficien­cy.

However, the abbreviate­d timeline would also promote the status quo in areas where current policy has fallen short. The past five years have seen billions in emergency and ad hoc spending in agricultur­e driven by trade and pandemic shocks.

The lack of mechanisms in the farm bill to foster greater resilience in the agricultur­al economy is evident in the need for supplement­al support and the developmen­t process of the next farm bill should address this. Current reference prices that trigger payments in the farm bill are pegged to output and do not take into account inflationa­ry pressures on farm inputs that drive costs.

Trade promotion programs that expand agricultur­al export options for U.S. sellers have been continuall­y underfunde­d relative to their economic potential.

‘‘The abbreviate­d timeline would also promote the status quo in areas where current policy has fallen short. The past five years have seen billions in emergency and ad hoc spending in agricultur­e driven by trade and pandemic shocks.”

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