Daily Camera (Boulder)

In farm bailout, top 1% reaped nearly 25% of aid

- By Mike Dorning

The Trump administra­tion’s farm bailouts steered an expanding share of subsidy payments to the nation’s biggest farms, according to an analysis by an environmen­tal advocacy group that highlights issues of equity as the Biden administra­tion designs potential new climate-related financial incentives for farmers.

Just 1% of farm aid recipients collected 23% of subsidy payments in 2019, up from 17% in 2016, as former President Donald Trump’s trade bailout swelled payments to farmers. Their portion crept up to 24% in the first half of 2020, the most recent period covered in the data, as farm aid hit a record level with coronaviru­s relief payments, according to the Environmen­tal Working Group analysis.

That is the largest share of federal farm subsidies going tothetop1%—the7,873 subsidy recipients who got the highest payments — since 2007, according to the analysis. The average payment for that group was $497,907.

The findings follow criticism from Democrats that Trump’s farm bailouts were skewed toward large farms and academic studies concluding the trade aid payments were greater than farmers’ actual losses from Trump’s tariff conflict with China. A General Accountabi­lity Office report issued in September found the top 25 recipients of trade aid in 2019 received an average of $1.5 million per farm.

“This cer tainly adds to the questions about the way that program was designed,” said Jonathan Coppess, a University of Illinois professor who ran the federal agency that administer­s farm subsidies during the Obama administra­tion and wasn’t involved in the advocacy group’s analysis. “Why all of a sudden did you see this big a shift?”

American farmers in 2020 had their most profitable year since 2013, largely because of federal aid, which accounted for 38% of their net income, the U.S. Depar tment of Agricultur­e reported earlier this month. Crop prices also rose late in the year as China stepped up agricultur­al impor ts.

“The largest and wealthiest farms should not be getting most of the money, because they have large assets to fall back on in times of trouble,” said Anne Schechinge­r, a senior analyst with the group. “We’re at a time when so many Americans have lost their jobs, are struggling to put food on the table or keep their businesses open, it makesyouwo­nderwhyso much money is going to farmers, especially the largest, wealthiest farmers.

She said the shift in subsidy payments toward larger farms in 2019 likely was driven by Trump’s adoption of a more generous formula for computing trade losses that year and a decision to double the maximum trade aid benefit per person. Large operators sometimes increase their subsidy payments by including relatives, even ones who live in distant cities, as actively engaged in management­ofthefarm, multiplyin­g the benefits they are allowed.

Trump administra­tion officials defended the program against criticism that too much money went to large farms, arguing that they tend to be more productive and so suffer larger losses from trade-related commodity price drops.

Schechinge­r said the Environmen­tal Working Group, which advocates re-directing farm subsidies to smaller operators and conser vation programs, released the findings in par t to focus attention on inequities in aid distributi­on as the Biden administra­tion considers financial incentives to encourage farmers to adopt climatefri­endly practices.

Administra­tion of ficials have floated ideas including a carbon bank to finance payments to farmers who take steps to sequester additional carbon in soil and other measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Schechinge­r said her organizati­on wants the USDA to avoid advantagin­g larger operations over smaller ones when it makes proposals. The Senate on Tuesday confirmed Tom Vilsack as Biden’s agricultur­e secretary. Vilsack also held that post during the Obama years.

USDA spokesman Matt Herrick said the department under Biden is determined to avoid skewed distributi­on of farm aid.

“Whether it is COVID-19 market disruption­s, trade disputes or extreme weather, it’s the department’s responsibi­lity to provide support to as many producers as possible without focusing on one group or geography at the expense of another,” Herrick said in an emailed response to the analysis. “We must create a more level playing fieldforsm­allandmedi­um producers and a more balanced, equitable economy for ever yone working in food and agricultur­e.”

The Environmen­tal Working Group regularly obtains data on federal farm subsidy payments through the Freedom of Informatio­n Act. Its analysis covered total farm subsidy payments, which includes both one-time programs under Trump and continuing farm programs authorized by Congress.

 ?? Paul Aiken / File ?? A report from the Environmen­tal Working Group shows that the top 1% of the United States’ biggest farms got a quarter of the funds from the Trump administra­tion’s farm bailouts.
Paul Aiken / File A report from the Environmen­tal Working Group shows that the top 1% of the United States’ biggest farms got a quarter of the funds from the Trump administra­tion’s farm bailouts.
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