An Inequality of Results
Note: This post is part of our League Symposium on inequality. You can read the introductory post for the Symposium here. To see a list of all posts in the Symposium so far, click here.
In the 1990 Farm Bill the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) underwent a major change, shifting its focus away from soil protection and erosion control and towards the goal of habitat restoration for wildlife. The mechanics of the program are complex but the basic premise is that farmers are paid to stop planting crops on a portion of their land and to instead engage in specific practices designed to create habitat for wildlife. Under the program millions of acres of U.S. land, much of which lies in the west, has been leased under the CRP. This has been viewed by many as a victory for both wildlife and for outdoorsmen who have taken advantage of new hunting opportunities. For rural communities though, the longterm effects have been less positive. One story from Washington state:
When farmers take a conservation payment rather than plant a crop, they don’t buy fuel and fertilizer, they don’t buy machinery and seed, and they don’t hire help for the harvest. In short…the payments stifle the local economies by suppressing high-production agriculture in an area that boasts some of the best wheat-growing conditions in the world.
What is happening in some rural communities is that they are moving away from a production-oriented economy towards a service economy. Instead of tractor dealerships and farm stores citizens work in hotels and restaurants that cater to traveling hunters. And as most people know, service jobs lead to large income gaps. This has been well-documented in large cities (NYC being the worst offender) by researchers like Joel Kotkin.
In LaCrosse, CRP is partly blamed for the loss of the town’s farm machinery dealership. Arrow Machinery closed its sales offices in LaCrosse and St. John and consolidated its presence in Colfax and Pomeroy.
“Used to be around here that the town would get some sales tax money when farmers would spend a few million dollars on new combines,” Burgess said. “We miss that.”
While the program helped many of them keep their land over the last few decades when commodity prices were lower, this dynamic has changed. Thanks to the rise of biofuels and other new products, prices for wheat, soybeans and corn are soaring and there is less motivation for farmers to continue to stay with the CRP. According to one source:
This year, contracts covering more than 6.5 million acres worth of CRP land will expire, the second-largest turnover in its 26-year history, according to USDA data.
In total, the amount of land in the CRP has fallen to the lowest since 1988, down 20 percent from a peak of 36.7 million acres in 2007, according to USDA data as of end-February.
While not all that land will be suitable for crops, economists say as much as half may be put back into farming for the first time in decades.
Interestingly enough, young farmers are seeing this as a once-in-a-generation chance to grab up land that hasn’t been farmed in years. The same program that saved the land from foreclosure is seen as one last obstacle to overcome before they can pursue their dreams of farming. With so many leases expiring this will be a dream realized for many of them.
What all of this points to is the reality that government programs, often created with the best of intentions, can lead to mixed results and at some point in the future they can actually cause real harm. The CRP saved much of the agricultural land of the west by encouraging more responsible farming practices in the 1950s and 1960s. In the 1980s and 1990s it kept farms afloat by replacing the loss of agricultural revenue. The program also restored millions of acres in wildlife habitat. The unintended effects have been an elimination of better-paying jobs and available land for aspiring farmers.
It’s hard to calculate if the CRP has been a net good or a ne bad. It sounds wishy-washy but the reality is that it has been both. The resolution is going to be left up to the interested parties. Is there a way to satisfy all of their goals? It is believed by some (myself included) that there is enough marginal land i.e. land unsuitable for crops but lying on their periphery, that the goals of good habitat can still be achieved. Farmers and hunters are natural partners in many respects and if they are willing to work together they can certainly find a solution that makes everyone happy.
Nice post, Brandon. I think I’m a bit confused about the argument here, so I’ll ask a question first. You include in the post the following quote:
When farmers take a conservation payment rather than plant a crop, they don’t buy fuel and fertilizer, they don’t buy machinery and seed, and they don’t hire help for the harvest. In short…the payments stifle the local economies by suppressing high-production agriculture in an area that boasts some of the best wheat-growing conditions in the world.
If the purpose of the payment is to maintain farms as viable entities, doesn’t it follow that without the payment more farms would enter foreclosure, leading to the same problem in any event? That is, that without the CRP you’d have the same negative effects of shrinking demand for combines and such, but without the added benefit of habitat restoration?Report
Whoops, sorry about getting your name wrong Mike. That’s sloppy in my part.Report
“If the purpose of the payment is to maintain farms as viable entities, doesn’t it follow that without the payment more farms would enter foreclosure, leading to the same problem in any event? “
No. Prices for corn, wheat and soybeans are nearing an all-time high. Farmers stand to make more money off the CRP than on. The CRP program kept those farms out of foreclosure when commodity prices were low.Report
Ahhh good. I thought that was the answer. So one solution is for CRP to dole out payments based on a finer grained set of conditions than they currently do. Another might be to eliminate the program altogether.
What do you think the solution is, especially given that farmers are making more directly as well as indirectly by leaving the CRP payment structure as it is?Report
I should add: it seems to me that an easy solution is to include a trigger on the payment structure such that if the projected profit derived from farming reaches 80% of the payment (or whatever), then the application is rejected.Report
I think you keep the CRP around – afterall, it’s completely voluntary. Additionally you can still try to incentivize other good wildlife management practices that still leave ample land for crops. Things like developing marginal spaces and planting edge crops.Report
Nothing is ever black and white, is it?
I think the big question here is this: Is it worth to keep the CRP payment structure?
It can be altered so that the amount it pays is more in line with current grain prices, but that might bring lots of side effects. Making its pay scale with the grain price in particular can lead to a nice inflation of the grain price due to lack of supply. On the other hand, keeping it at the current levels will mean a lot of the land that is used for biodiversity will be turned into farmlands.
So, it is not simple. But the biggest questions that should be looked back are: Did the legislation have the desired effect? And was it worth it?
It is impossible to fix a problem if you dont deal with the root of the problem. The CRP did deal with the root of the problem – it made it worth for farmers to stop using some of their lands for farming. However, that created a whole lot of other problems for the communities where those farms were located. All these problems must be weighted, and to decide upon what to do with the program you must have some sort of ‘net worth’. The problem of having more diverse biosphere locally is that the local impact is minimal, its impact on a larger scale can be large, but it is awfully hard to measure it.
Although some people in the government would like you to think so, there is no magical bullet that can solve all of the problems.
CRP at least tries to deal with the root of the problem – making it worth to have land that is not farmed, instead of trying some of the more magical solutions.Report
There’s a big part of me that favors taking land out of production to promote wildlife habitat, so I tend to like the CRP program. But the effects on local economies are undoubtedly real.
It’s not at all certain what would happen in a true free market for agriculture, but it’s clear that our ag policies have had some unintended effects that nobody really likes. In addition to the local economic effects of the CRP program, our ag subsidies have led to consolidation of farms, as the future expected benefit of the subsidies gets discounted into the current price, making it harder for heirs to afford to pay the inheritance taxes on the land and pricing young farmers out of the ag land market. A friend of mine in Iowa who grew up on a farm and who’s dad until retirement was a farmer then a farm manger for a bank recently sold off part of his grandfather’s farm to cover inheritance taxes and take a little extra on the side. He liked the price he got, but only, he said, because ag land prices are much too high right now.Report
The market is a killer for agriculture. It distorts production to an astonishing degree. Because farmers make more per acre with corn than anything else, a farmer is taking a fiscal loss to grow anything else. If they’re a new farmer and got a mortgage, that might not be something they can afford.Report