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The Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002— The Dairy Subtitle. 2002 Farm Bill Education Conference Kansas City, Missouri May 20-21, 2002 Mark Stephenson Cornell University. Major Pieces…. Milk Price Support Program extended Dairy Export Incentive Program extended
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The Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002—The Dairy Subtitle 2002 Farm Bill Education Conference Kansas City, Missouri May 20-21, 2002 Mark Stephenson Cornell University
Major Pieces… • Milk Price Support Program extended • Dairy Export Incentive Program extended • Promotion fees for imports • Fluid milk promotion extended • Mandatory reporting • National Dairy Market Loss Payments • Three dairy studies
Related Pieces • Environmental • Field crops
Milk Price Support Program • Has been around in some form since the 1930s • Sets a price goal—not a price • Original idea was price stability—not price enhancement • Found in 1970s that you can buy votes with price enhancement • Found in 1980s that votes can be expensive
Price Support & “Tilt” • Current price support level is $9.90 and is to be maintained at that level • Program extended through 2007 • Twice a year, the secretary may adjust purchase price of nonfat dry milk and butter to minimize CCC expenditures
Dairy Export Incentive Program • Government accepts bids to close the gap between domestic prices and world market prices • There are dollar and volume limits on DEIP exports • Program provides a low-cost means of relieving downward pressure on domestic markets
Promotion • Imports will contribute to NationalDairy Promotion and Research Board(Got Milk) • Some of the NDPRB monies will be used to promote U.S. products in export markets • Fluid Milk Promotion extended indefinitely (milk mustache)
Mandatory Reporting • Regulated milk prices are now determined with product price formulas • Manufacturing firms must report sales data (price and volume) to NASS • Manufacturing firms must report inventory data to NASS
National Dairy Market Loss Payments–Background • Something for everyone • Compact-like in structure (New England is happy) • Tax-payers foot the bill, not consumers (processors are happy) • Regionally uniform access to benefits (Upper Midwest is happy–looks like national pooling) • Losers • Possibly larger dairy producers • Less than average milk drinkers • (Must be a deadweight loss in here somewhere)
Features • Trigger—$16.94 class I price in Boston • 45% of the difference when the class I price is lower • Direct payment every month • Payments are retroactive from December 1, 2001 through September 30, 2005 (not entire farm bill) • Only on 2,400,000 pounds of milk per fiscal year (on current production, not a base) • Signup, probably with FSA
Detail Questions… • How easy will it be to divide farm into 2.4 million pound units? • Bill says no “reconstitution” of farms • Probably difficult to enforce • Is the payment on the first 2.4 million pounds or can you choose time period? • Want to pick lowest class I prices
Pounds per Cow Herd Size Percent of Maximum Payment
Impacts… • FAPRI estimates • 89¢ payment on eligible milk production over the life of the program • 17¢ decline in class III price • 28¢ decline in class IV price • Roughly, 500 cows is break even size
Concluding Thoughts… • Is this policy? • I think that FAPRI’s price impact estimates are conservative • We are coming off of the largest market price year ever and milk production is coming on strong • These payments will probably retard the loss of small farms and large farms will react favorably to the low feed grain prices.
Concluding Thoughts… • Big production and low milk prices are inevitable • CCC purchases will be considerable even with a tilt • The NDMLP will cost much more than the $1.3 billion CBO score • QED—Low milk prices prove the need for the program