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Message to President Obama: Why Trade Will Not Save Rural America
In Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack’s op-ed this week in the Des Moines Register, he recognized that hunger could not be solved by raising production, because production is in fact at record highs. Grappling with how these increases in productivity have not led to increases in profit, he explained that even though we’ve lost a million farmers in the last 40 years, “income from farming operations declined as a percentage of total farm family income by half.” He continued, “Today, only 11 percent of family farm income comes from farming, which may explain why fewer young people go into farming and why many families rely on off-farm income opportunities to keep their farms.” Vilsack gets the situation right, but his remedy is wrong. Instead of encouraging diversity and altering the pattern of overproduction which pits large farm owners against small by shrinking margins, the Obama administration’s way of dealing with the discrepancy in rural America is through increasing trade.
In his State of the Union address last Wednesday, President Obama covered a lot of ground. His primary goal was to focus on job creation, but he left out one important occupation–in a nation where the average farmer is 57 years old, we need farmers. He mentioned the obesity crisis, noting that the First Lady would be dedicating her efforts there, and then made this comment about doubling our trade in goods and commodity crops in the next five years:
To help meet this goal, we’re launching a National Export Initiative that will help farmers and small businesses increase their exports, and reform export controls consistent with national security. We have to seek new markets aggressively, just as our competitors are. If America sits on the sidelines while other nations sign trade deals, we will lose the chance to create jobs on our shores. But realizing those benefits also means enforcing those agreements so our trading partners play by the rules. And that’s why we’ll continue to shape a Doha trade agreement that opens global markets, and why we will strengthen our trade relations in Asia and with key partners like South Korea and Panama and Colombia.
He has thus far stuck to his word. According to the USDA, $234.5 million is being given to 70 U.S. trade organizations to help promote American food and agricultural products abroad (you can see who this money is going to, from the Cotton Council International, which received a whopping $20 million, to trade reps for perishables like the California Prune Board, which received nearly $3 million). The Farm Bureau is thrilled that this administration is poised to aggressively pursue trade agreement negotiations with other countries as it clearly benefits big producers. So is Republican senator and erstwhile Bush Jr. Secretary of Agriculture nominee Mike Johanns from Nebraska, who had this to say:
With unemployment at 10 percent, we should be pursuing every possible avenue to promote good opportunities for job growth and business investment. Our businesses, farmers, and ranchers produce the highest quality products in the world and deserve an opportunity to compete on a level playing field.
The problem is that places like South Korea have expressed that they don’t want our goods if they contain hormones, antibiotics or genetically modified organisms (GMOs). Worse, though, is that our products are not traded on a “level playing field,” but instead are sold at an unfairly low prices in developing countries, made falsely cheap by our subsidy system. Developed world subsidies have been the prime barrier to negotiations at the Doha Development Round trade talks, which began in 2001 and continue to this day with no agreement–which many consider a victory for developing nations. And while Obama seeks to cut subsidies in his budget, it will be an uphill battle, especially without a stricter definition for who is a farmer.
Ben Lilliston, Communications Director for the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy had this to say about the administration’s plan for increasing trade:
The goal of doubling commodity trade is not feasible or wise. This emphasis on export markets is odd given that it runs directly counter to a lot of the Administration’s work to support local food systems. And expanding exports would definitely come at the expense of local food systems. The reality is that we’ve tried to expand agriculture exports for the last 50 years. That goal represents a lot of what is wrong in U.S. farm policy: a push to lower commodity prices–to make us more competitive internationally; an emphasis on just a few commodity crops; and support for large-scale operations over smaller, more diversified farms. An emphasis on exports has benefited multinational agribusiness firms, but not farmers either in the U.S., or in other countries. U.S. agribusiness companies have a several decade record of exporting commodity crops like corn, soybeans, rice and wheat at prices below the cost of production–a practice known as dumping. The result has been devastating to poor countries trying to develop their own food production. The loss of food production in many poor countries is a major contributor to growing hunger around the world. What makes the proposal so strange is that the Administration has to know this is not possible. Even agribusiness companies–who I’m sure love the proposal–know it’s not possible to reach.
Here is what trade agreements looks like in action: as a result of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), U.S. corn sold cheaper than it could be produced, putting millions of Mexican farmers out of business–simultaneously quashing the diversity of the corn varieties and genetically contaminating locally grown corn with GMOs. As a result, these jobless farmers have made their way across the border to pick fruits and vegetables in America (often in slave-like conditions), or work mind-numbing jobs in slaughterhouses. But NAFTA’s destructive legacy runs deeper still. Last October, Mexico was ordered to pay the corn-processing giant Cargill a $77 million dollar fine for imposing a tax on high fructose corn syrup in an attempt to protect their domestic sugar farmers.
Vilsack’s op-ed focused on rebuilding rural America. However, when dollars leave the farm community headed to corporate multinationals for seed, chemicals and equipment, and the products produced on the farm are not food but commodities that then leave the community too, how can broadband and increased trade be anything more than band-aids for rural America? In the face of facts like climate change, to which agriculture contributes at least 30% of carbon emissions, decreased water availability and uncertain oil resources, trade veils the real problems facing the food system. What we need is balance: balanced opportunities in rural areas, a balanced ecosystem with diversified crops that feed local populations, and a balanced number of farmers to knit that community together. More farmers means more jobs, more stewardship of the land, and better quality food–and as a result, a thriving rural economy.
Up next, watch for the administration to start pressuring Senator Jim Bunning (R-KY) to release his hold on Islam Siddiqui, Obama’s nominee for Chief Agricultural Negotiator, who’s pesticide lobbying past is not behind the pause. Indeed, who else but a Big Ag lobbyist could they get to take on such a mission seemingly bound for disaster?
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41 Comments so far
Show AllI see around me here in rural KY the effects of government policies. Farms up for sale as youngsters choose other work, not because they don't want to farm, but they cannot afford to do so. Corn is kept deliberately below the cost of production for small farmers. But they need to grow it for feed to fatten up quickly their cattle for market where prices are also artificially low. Equipment prices run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
So we will lose another million small farmers at an ever increasing rate.
And so much for the hopes of organic farming which hasn't the market to support more than a few lucky farmers.
The situation is dire and increasing exports will hurt farmers in other countries as well as not significantly improve the lot for small farmers, just big argibusiness.
Gary
“As the farmer who won the lottery said when asked what he was going to do with his winnings "Keep farming until it's all gone”
-- unknown
17 years later I still feel ill when I think about Bill Clinton's zealous promotion and passage of NAFTA without even pretending to care about displaced workers here and abroad, worker safety and environmental impacts. Although I have never voted for a Republican in 40 years of voting, I have voted for very few Democrats since the evil NAFTA bill was passed.
The $77 million dollar fine Mexico must pay Cargill adds insult to injury and assures that the ugly American keeps getting uglier.
If Obama was serious about improving America's image abroad, the $77 million fine would not have been levied even if NAFTA wasn't scuttled.
When more of the same hasn't worked, let's try more of the same. Our once thriving rural landscape has been turned into corn and soybean "financial deserts" where the majority of the meager profits go elsewhere. Hopefully the coming Depression will obliterate capital intensive agriculture.
Crossfield is correct on every point.
One year in the 70's more than half the black farmers in the south lost their farms due to foreclosures ( due to generously offered government loans suddenly being called due). Remember Johnson's agriculture secretary (deputy?)found dead in the Texas cotton country, a "suicide" with multiple gunshot wounds.
I agree with the author, throughout the Delta, where once thriving communities existed, drugs, crime and transfer payment fuel failing local economies because;
"when dollars leave the farm community headed to corporate multinationals for seed, chemicals and equipment, and the products produced on the farm are not food but commodities that then leave the community too, how can broadband and increased trade be anything more than band-aids for rural America? In the face of facts like climate change, to which agriculture contributes at least 30% of carbon emissions, decreased water availability and uncertain oil resources, trade veils the real problems facing the food system. What we need is balance: balanced opportunities in rural areas, a balanced ecosystem with diversified crops that feed local populations, and a balanced number of farmers to knit that community together. More farmers means more jobs, more stewardship of the land, and better quality food–and as a result, a thriving rural economy".
How long, before common sense has its day?
"Message to President Obama: Why Trade Will Not Save Rural America"
Who said BO carez about rural America?? By definition, 'rural' is outside the Bubble and is only represented there, I assume, by BigAg lobbyists (and their congresspersons).
The author, being knowledgable in the field ('food' anyway), takes some care to separate real farmers from agribiz, but too often these are conflated in the media, in public discourse, and certainly in D.C. Although both 'grow things', they are polar opposites in many ways and should never be confused with each other.
I was going to comment also on the fine that "Mexico was ordered to pay the corn-processing giant Cargill... for imposing a tax on high fructose corn syrup", but it lead me to find out who exactly was imposing the fine and how bad exactly is the HFCS that we consume in half the stuff we eat.
The fine was applied by some arm of NAFTA, I think, and the fructose/glucose/sucrose thing is complicated. There IS some cause to make a connection between high consumption of HFCS and the incidence of obesity, diabetes, and even possible exposure to mercury. sigh.
“Last October, Mexico was ordered to pay the corn-processing giant Cargill a $77 million dollar fine for imposing a tax on high fructose corn syrup in an attempt to protect their domestic sugar farmers.”
Cargill managed to corner the market on tortillas in Mexico by buying up the largest corn millers and tortilla makers in Mexico and then tripling the price on tortillas, leading directly to Mexico’s food riots of 2008. Fining Mexico for affronts to Cargill is much like fining the Los Angles police department for taking away the Manson family’s guns and knives.
Note that the price of tortillas doubled under NAFTA prior to the price spike in corn. Corn prices went down AND tortilla prices went up.
release the land from the hands of the privatizers...
let everybody be a farmer, a gardener, a harvester...
September 22, 2012...
Why "September 22, 2012" (fall equinox) ? - I thought it was December 22, 2012 (winter solstice), that all self-conned new agers sits around on their hands waiting for thinking "come 2012 we'll all change...", instead of actually DOING something.
WE're the ones we're waiting for! Our acts are the acts we're waiting for! Us changing is the change we're waiting for!
It's a circular thought - the overdone thinking of it blocking conduct due to wondering when will it spin off into action? - It's like sitting around freezing while waiting for the discomfort to become so great that one simply puts on a frigging jacket already!
Get real, get going.
Free trade is used to keep everything cheap but at the same time benefit the leaders of the trading partners. I want to be able to make more money by getting more appliances to repair but people will choose to throw out the old one and buy a new one because it's cheap. The article is right that Obama cannot afford to continue NAFTA against rural America. I support cancelling NAFTA but I know that it will be impossible to do because the minute Obama were to do it, those countries would go kicking and screaming and prices would skyrocket. People need to pressure their leaders and we need to pressure Obama to renegotiate on NAFTA.
Shawn,
I highly recommend the following article which outlines how the government is involved in job destruction, regardless of its alleged efforts to create jobs:...http://www.financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/schiff/2010/0205.html...
Don't mind the farm system; the fat feed the fatter, it is atherosclerotic and will collapse under its own weight some day. True, at present it does damage to small scale farming not to mention ecosytems and claims to the vegetative genetic commons.
Small scale farming needs to be based on bioregion-scaled farming cooperatives that should run on renewable sources of energy (think methane, solar, wind, small hydro etc.) to produce critical foodstuff. These would also be able to exercise influence at the level of local politics.
When the system starts to fail (and it will as most of it is run on oil) we may have a base from which to re-build our local agriculture.
As an old time farmer used to say: "despacio se llega lejos" - "you get farther moving slow"
Transition Analyst
Common sense will not even be a wisper. It' all about profit... forget the need for local food, forget the climate and how agbusines contributes... The problem is that every things is "too big to fail". When I was younger, I was so impressed with big. As time went on I was also impressed with how you could go from one town to the next and all the stores would be the same. Malls had all the same stores and all the same set up. I would think, gee, just think, all those people in ohter countries could do the same. In some cases and more and more. the "progress of availbility" would come to those"poor" countries and they would have fun too! How naive I was. I'm sorry to say that I had the warped ideas. Maybe not as much as some, but I was kind of heading in that direction in the eigthies. Before that no...
My point is that diviersity is the key, not the spread of some corp bully. Hasn't anyone figured out that the corps have become the big bully in the old western town that owned everything. He had a hand around everyone's neck and controled all the resources in town. This is the type of event that was the reason that certain laws had been put into effect-to put a block on those businessmen or CAPITLIST who would suck up all the resources around and control everything and everyone. BUT this has been forgootten by our leaders, or some of them.
Corporate strangle holds are what is strangling the breath out of our lives, our nation and our future.
Bill Clinton, aka Slick Willie Clinton, gave us Nafta,
Globalization, The New World Order, Free Trade. Are we better of because of Bubba's Game? Clinton is pulling in Millions of Dollars a day doing his Arkansa Museum Thing from Foreign countries. Why are they so beholden to Clinton?
Time for us to end the Clinton Circus that has ruined our
economy and our industrial base. Obama's ties and connections to Bubba are simply making things worse for the working classes
The reason we grow food is so that people can eat.
We should not be growing food based upon the PROFIT involved.
People go hungry in Mexico, Haiti and now the United States, because the POLICIES make it all baout PROFIT.
Obama pushes the same policy. Profits before hunger, and the more the hunger the greater the profits.
Obama is wrong to continue NAFTA but NAFTA wouldn't be there without the other countries that are a part of the deal cooperating with the US. Why aren't any of those leaders teaming up to say no to NAFTA? We have to pressure Obama and people in those countries tied to NAFTA have to pressure their leaders to renegotiate it to fair trade. I would like to see NAFTA cancelled but even if Obama wanted to do so, the other nations that are tied to it would not allow it.
What other countries do or do not do is immaterial. What is material is making the PROFIT motive the driving focus of every policy.
Farmers in Haiti are not driving the US Agri-businesses under. Farmers in Mexico are not driving Cargill and Mosanto under.
The Corporations doing such tend to be based in the first world nations. They are primarily responsible for the harm done.
Nations in Central America and the caribbean that have TRIED to extricate themselves from this have seen their leaders assassinated or US backed coups replace their Governments.
Cuba has refused to involve itself in such trade agreements and we can see how the USA responds to such. Chavez does the same in Venezuala and Mr Obama has authrorized the destabilization of that Government and placed Military bases in Columbia and in Aruba and Curaco.
That's way too many details for Shawn. He prefers to always call for "pressuring" Obama to do progressive things, regardless of the futility. The main thing is, don't bash Obama, just congenially "pressure" him.
We shouldn't just pressure Obama. We need to take a look at our stupid lifestyles. You think it's fun watching blue collared workers losing their jobs because everyone wants cheap and easy even if we have to get it from overseas? Maybe that's why I don't mind taking the time to watch some good TV shows and join community efforts on getting progressive ideas out there rather than reading outdated stuff.
Why are you blaming only the US for everything? If those countries are controlled by US backed coups, why isn't there an uprising to counter it? Why is Hugo Chavez successful compared to other nations involved in these trade deals? I agree that corporations are bullies but they're only powerful to sell out because everyone wants everything cheap and easy. How do you think I feel when I'm losing customers to cheap products from overseas when I could repair their appliances? Multinational corporations have no allegiance to any country and I hate them too but if everyone's addicted to them because they want everything cheap and easy, why blame the president alone? Don't you think this is a systematic problem? Would the US be destabilizing Venezuala if our global lifestyle weren't so dependent on oil? Let's see some switchgrass ethanol coming up, energy demand dropping, and watch the US stop depending on foreign oil.
I blame the US because the US Corporations are the most to blame. Haiti . Jamiaca, El Salvador, the Honduras all could once feed themselves until the Corporate States of America forced their policies upon them.
It was not Russia behind the Coup in the Honduras. It was not China behind the Coip in Haiti. It was not Canada that tried to invade Cuba and kill Castro. It was not Germany that sponsored the Coup in Chile. It was not France that was supplying the Contras with arms.
These people are poor. They can barely get enough to eat day to day. How do you think they can rise up against Militaries armed with Machine guns who will call in Air Strikes against them?
They rose up in the Honduras and were slaughtered. In Chile those who would rise up were captured, tortured and dropped into the sea. In El Slavador the USA helped fund right wing death squads that would execute any who dared "rise up". Officials in your own Government pointed to the El Salvador option as a great success and suggested it be used in Iraq.
My God. This is grotesque evil In our name. No wonder the corporations and military work together. No wonder we engender such hate and then the response is to cry terrorism. Thanks for the broader view. It may be immediately gratifying to soulless corporations to pursue such means of profit, but theres the fact that it endangers us all.. for their profit.
There is work in congress to pass the Trade Reform, Accountability, Development and Employment (TRADE) Act. It's a good change. See more at Public Citizen.
Other countries have stopped further AFTA grade agreements. Even supporters now see the negative results. Lori Wallach of Public Citizen had a good video here: http://www dot iptv.org/video/detail.cfm/3135/ittv_20081220_155
GwNorth, Isn't free market capitalism wonderful?
Yes. And we provide health services so that people can get well.
We should not be providing health care based on PROFIT.
Your right its policies but not for people.
Obama is a disappointment. I don't believe this health care debacle is an accident. It drives us into the dirt.
GwNorth: do you agree that the sale, say, corn must produce at least some reserves ("profit") to protect the farmer against bad year(s) or allow him to expand his acreage? Or do you suggest to go back to the system where the farmer had to borrow money to cover such expenses and pay interest("profit")? It seems to me that large farmer-owned cooperatives are the best answer to your call for a sane agricultural business.
Strangely, US policy is to lose money on farm exports, not to profit on them. We're the leading agricultural exporter, we have the lions share of the market, sometimes twice as big as OPEC in oil, and we use our clout to lower, not raise, farm export profits. We hurt LDC countries (70% rural, dependent upon farm prices) by losing money ourselves. Increasing exports makes no sense when we lose money per unit.
Double commodity exports? Sounds like a victory for Cargill and big ag's chief lobbyist, Patton Boggs. I fear the impact on farmers in most of the developing world.
nsgandersen
These policies are made to do just that-put the small farmers in those countries out of business- sot that they have to give up their land and -modernize... go to work in the factories-owned by corps of the U.S. They will then be benefitting from big corps wonderful efforts to spread the wealth...
NOT---they'll be going to work at slave wage or as actual slaves... in horrible working conditions... leaving nature behind.
We need people that know how to farm- or have an opportunity to learn (even part-timers)
We NEED a FARM CORPS like the Peace Corps. It would be dedicated to returning American land to family farmers and restoring the security that comes when the people can depend on their own local involvement with food to survive any national crisis like a breakdown in the distribution/transportation or outright price gouging by giant ag.
This program could also be a vehicle in RURAL AMERICA to SUPPLEMENT FARMERS that already exist as they host training on their farms for students in the community (through Career Technical Education Programs in our high schools or adult education programs in local colleges) Farmers could get a stipend. The operation for teaching could subsidize material equipments. Local 40 hour working folks Jack and Jill could take a class to learn what they can do with their 10 acres to help themselves economically. Working on a farm in PRACTICE and earning ED CREDIT would be a real boost given our economic times and the desire for many to get out from under corporate America. Think about it. I sent this to Granholm and heard nothing back
We don't know how to grow anything or make soap anymore.
Good ideas. My mother grew up in the depression and was in fact born in a Sod hut. What her and my father KNOW about farming and making do with less is simply amazing and will soon be lost. I myself grew up on the farm and even surprise myself with common sense stuff I learned as a child that I have taken into adult life.
I see no reason, as example, as why greenbelts of agricultural land could not be reserved outside a City (Or indeed inside the cities limits in small plots) where food is grown for local consumption and where City dwellers pitch in with their labor in return for food they pay for with that labor.
In Britain prior to the turn of the Century, Business oweners by law HAD TO ALLOW their employees a number of days off per year without that employee fearing getting fired so that employee could go out into the country and help bring in the harvest.
Imagine if BY LAW I could go out one day a week, not fear being fired and put in 8 hours on a small farm? Imagine the time I put in on that farm being tallied up on some card wherein I could turn it in for food at any time?
There are a whole lot of bodies in our cities that can replace those MACHINES on small scale plots and help grow a whole lot of food.
WOW GwNorth! amazing background you have!
what you describe would be a HEALTHY society.. SANE and healthy!
Yes.. thank you. Lets get started on a good and sane future!
Well, restraining the supermarkets from profiteering at the expense of both the farmer and the consumer might be a good start.
And perhaps reducing the paperwork involved in farming - so that you don't need a corporate structure with a fleet of accountants to grow a little corn and sell it - might be a worthwhile second step.
President Obama's proposed trade and its associated job policies are outright clownish.
Obama's goal is to double "our exports" in the next few years, thereby increasing employment. Now what have "our exports" been in the past few decades and will continue to remain so?
1. Services. Primarily security aid to foreign governments in the form of armies, air forces, and "Blackwaters". It is actually us US taxpayers who are paying for most of this "export" although the rich countries Germany and Japan are asked to fork up billions of dollars each year.
2. Capital. Ford automakers build the cars for their relatively successful Chinese market....in China. Does anyone expect Ford to close its Chines plants to be nice to Mr. Obama and tell the Chinese that their cars will become more expensive because they will now be made in Detroit? LOL! And Ford is just one of numerous examples.
3. Military hardware and nuclear technology. This is precisely what the more affluent Asian governments such as that of Taiwan want more than anything else. The problem is that huge numbers of items are forbidden to be exported.
Mr. Obama does not understand that our capitalism is indeed in what Lenin called "Imperialism, the highest form of capitalism". Peel away some typical Leninist exaggerations and you find pretty much what western capitalism is today in a book written in 1916! The principal difference between Lenin's predictions and today's reality is that the most important "third world countries" China and India do not fight the imperialist penetration but tag along with it in an attempt to become imperialist-capitalist themselves and out-muscle us. They and Germany already have cornered the "Green Market". Mr. Obama: you cannot talk us into prosperity. Hot air does not produce jobs.
And a final comment. "We" did overcome the Great Depression, did "we" not? Yes, thanks largely to steeply rising salaries during and after WW2 coupled with low inflation. In retrospect, the "overcoming of the Great Depression" has turned out to have been an unmitigated disaster for the entire world because there followed no fundamental change, only diddling at the fringes. Instead it was full steam ahead to "Imperialism, the highest form of capitalism".
Grow your own. Learn to preserve. Buy organic seeds. Join a co-op and a CSA. Ask a local farmer if you can rent some space if you don't have any. I have seen 40 cucumbers grow in one 2x2 hydroponic box. There are over 1400 types of beans to grow safely. Save yourself cause none of those people give a shit for your future or your health.
Oh yeah...and don't forget to share.
In 1998, the World Bank's structural adjustment policies forced India to open its seed sector to big farm corps. Farmer saved seeds were replaced with corp seeds, GMOs requiring specific pesticides and herbicides, and were not allowed to be saved under threat. They caused the farms to lose their saved seed system, and create dire circumstances that lead to a crash in diversity. In the eleven years following, over 200,000 farmers commited suicide. It is growing daily as crops fail, and debt is incurred. This was a designed intentional plot to destroy the agriculture of the small farmers in India.
Thanks to the work of Vandana Shiva, 10 hits on CD about her, some of this is changing. As an American, I am appalled that our government is complicit in this sort of travesty. And they are trying to do it here in the US to the small farmers here by stinging farmers with GMO seed, required to purchase seed each year, and poison us and the planet with all manner of chemicals. Monsanto ADM Dow Dupont piss off. People are getting smarter than you can r&d. If those big corps were really smart, they'd do the right thing. They have no idea how rich they could be doing the right thing.
Daryll E. Ray of APAC (UTenn) gives useful factual corrections to these export illusions, including this year: "Exports: Agriculture’s holy grail" and "Current farm policy is based on an export-centric narrative." Search these or see his column, presentations and publications. Cf. below.
Related: Paula Crossfield of Civil Eats is correct to quote staff from IATP here, but she herself apparently misunderstands key issues that the Ben Lilliston quote doesn't specifically correct. This is unfortunate, as she does well on many points. Specifically, she seems to believe that subsidies cause the key problems ("our products are not traded on a 'level playing field,' but instead are sold at an unfairly low prices in developing countries, [true] made falsely cheap by our subsidy system [false].... And while Obama seeks to cut subsidies in his budget, it will be an uphill battle.") Yes, low farm prices are usually the key problem. Contrary to popular belief (among progressives, in food films, from food movement leaders, etc.) subsidies have very little affect on prices (ie. -3 to +4% according to econometric studies summarized Tufts U) while dumping was huge, even up to 65% on cotton (IATP). Likewise subsidy elimination in 3 countries did not reduce supply for a group of commodities (Daryll Ray, Rethinking US Agricultural Policy, also good on export Q.).
The missing key: price floors with supply management for low prices, price ceilings and reserves for spikes. Lowering and eliminating price floors caused the low market prices. subsidies came later, to compensate farmers for part of the losses. For example, prices floors were lowered and prices fell starting in 1953, but rice subsidies didn't start until 1977. NFFC is the key promoter of the needed policies, while too many other progressive groups still don't even know about them.
When Vandana Shiva spoke to the MOSES organic conference a few years ago she didn't mention these key policies. I cornered her and asked her and she identified and supported them: price floors and ceilings, supply management and reserves. See my links collection on these matters at http://www dot zcommunications.org/zspace/bradwilson