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Acreage reduction program (ARP)An
annual land retirement system for wheat, feed grains, cotton,
or rice in which participating farmers idled a crop-specific,
nationally set portion of their crop acreage base. Farmers
choosing to participate in this voluntary program were eligible
for benefits such as Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) commodity
loans and deficiency payments, although no payments were made
on the idled ARP land. The 1996 and 2002 Farm Acts did not
reauthorize ARPs.
Additional peanutsUnder
the peanut program prior to 2002, peanuts sold from a farm
in any marketing year in excess of the amount of the farms
peanut poundage quota. The higher of two price support loan
rate levels applied only to the quantity of peanuts within
the annually determined poundage quota. Additional peanuts
were eligible only for the lower price-support loan rate,
the level of which was determined by the Secretary of Agriculture,
taking into consideration the demand for peanut oil and meal,
expected prices of other vegetable oils and protein meals,
and the demand for peanuts in foreign markets.
Adjusted world price, cotton (AWP)As part of
the upland cotton marketing assistance loan program, USDA
calculates and publishes, on a weekly basis, what is known
as the adjusted world price. The AWP is the prevailing world
price for upland cotton, adjusted to account for U.S. quality
and location. Producers who have taken out USDA marketing
assistance loans may choose to repay them at either the lesser
of the established commodity loan rate for upland cotton,
plus interest, or the announced AWP for that week. The AWP
for cotton also is used for determining Step 2 cotton program
payments.
Aggregate measurement of support
(AMS)An index that measures the monetary value of
the extent of government support to a sector. The AMS, as
defined in the Agreement on Agriculture, includes both budgetary
outlays as well as revenue transfers from consumers to producers
as a result of policies that distort market prices. The AMS
includes actual or calculated amounts of direct payments to
producers (such as deficiency payments), input subsidies (on
irrigation water, for example), the estimated value of revenue
transferred from consumers to producers as a result of policies
that distort market prices (market price supports), and interest
subsidies on commodity loan programs
Agreement on AgricultureThe Uruguay Round Agreement
on Agriculture reached in 1994 and implemented in U.S. law by the
Uruguay Round Agreements Act of 1994 brings agricultural trade more
fully under international trade rules and obligations. Under the
Agreement, quantitative barriers to trade are converted to tariffs
or tariff-rate quotas and then are reduced over time, and export
subsidies and trade-distorting domestic support policies are reduced.
Agricultural Act of 1949P.L.
89-439 (October 31, 1949), along with the Agricultural Adjustment
Act of 1938, makes up the major part of the permanent law that mandates
commodity price and farm income support. The original 1949 Act designated
mandatory support for basic commodities and the following nonbasic
commodities: wool and mohair, tung nuts, honey, Irish potatoes (excluded
in the Agricultural Act of 1954), as well as milk, butterfat, and
their products. Provisions of this law are often superseded by more
current legislation. If the current legislation expires and new
legislation is not enacted, the law reverts back to the permanent
provisions of the 1949 Act.
Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) of
1938P.L. 75-430 (February 16, 1938) was enacted as a replacement
for the farm subsidy policies found unworkable in the AAA legislation
of 1933. The 1938 Act was the first to make price support mandatory
for corn, cotton, and wheat to help maintain a sufficient supply
in low production periods, along with marketing quotas to keep supply
in line with market demand. It established permissive supports for
butter, dates, figs, hops, turpentine, rosin, pecans, prunes, raisins,
barley, rye, grain sorghum, wool, winter cover-crop seeds, mohair,
peanuts, and tobacco for the 1938-40 period. Title V of the Act
established the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. The 1938 Act
is considered part of permanent legislation for commodity programs
and farm income support (along with the Commodity Credit Corporation
Charter Act and the Agricultural Act of 1949). Provisions of this
law are often superseded by more current legislation. If the current
legislation expires and new legislation is not enacted, the law
reverts back to the permanent provisions of the 1938 Act.
Agricultural and food scienceCongress
defines "agricultural and food science" as basic, applied,
and developmental research, extension, and teaching activities in
food and fiber, agricultural, renewable natural resources, forestry,
and physical and social sciences.
Agricultural Market Transition Act (AMTA)Title
I of the 1996 Act allowed farmers who participated in the wheat,
feed grain, cotton, and rice programs in any one of the previous
5 years to enter into 7-year production flexibility contracts for
1996-2002. Total production flexibility contract payment levels
for each fiscal year were fixed. The AMTA allowed farmers to plant
100 percent of their total contract acreage to any crop, except
for limitations on fruits and vegetables, and receive a full payment.
Land had to be maintained in agricultural uses, including idling
or conserving uses. Unlimited haying and grazing was allowed, as
was the planting and harvesting of alfalfa and other forage corpswith
no reduction in payments.
Agricultural useRefers to cropland
planted to an agricultural crop, used for haying or grazing, idled
for weather-related reasons or natural disasters, or diverted from
crop production to an approved cultural practice that prevents erosion
or other degradation.
Amber box policiesAn expression
that developed during the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT) trade negotiations using a traffic light analogy to rank
policies. The traffic light analogy was that an amber policy be
subject to careful review and reduction over time. Amber box policies
include policies such as market price support, payments related
to current production or prices, and input subsidies.
Base acreage (or crop acreage base)A farms crop-specific
acreage of wheat, feed grains, upland cotton, rice, oilseeds, or
peanuts eligible to participate in commodity programs under the
2002 Farm Act. Base acreage includes land that would have been eligible
to receive production flexibility contract payments in 2002 and
producers of other covered commodities (oilseed and peanut producers).
Producers had the option to choose base acres to reflect contract
acreage that would otherwise have been used for 2002 pfc payments
or to update base acres to reflect the 4-year average of planted
plus prevented from planting for the commodity during the 1998-2001
crop years. Producers must select one of the two options for all
covered commodities, including oilseeds.
Bill Emerson Humanitarian TrustA special wheat, corn,
grain sorghum, and rice reserve of up to 4 million metric tons,
to be used for humanitarian food aid purposes. The Trust was formerly
the Food Security Commodity Reserve and the Food Security Wheat
Reserve. The Africa: Seeds of Hope Act of 1998 allows the retention
and use of funds from P.L. 480 reimbursements to purchase grain
to replace supplies released from the reserve. The purchases are
limited to no more than $20 million per fiscal year. CCC also is
authorized to hold money as well as commodities in the reserve.
Commodity certificatesPayments issued by the Commodity
Credit Corporation (CCC) in lieu of cash payments to participants
in farm subsidy or agricultural export programs. Holders of certificates
are permitted to exchange them for commodities owned by the CCC.
Certificates were used not only to compensate program beneficiaries
but also to reduce the large, costly, and price-depressing commodity
surpluses held by the CCC during the mid-1980s.
Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC)A
federally owned and operated corporation within the USDA created
to stabilize and support agricultural prices and farm income by
making loans and payments to producers, purchasing commodities,
and engaging in various other operations. The CCC handles all money
transactions for agricultural price and income support and related
programs.
Commodity loan rateThe price per
unit (pound, bushel, bale, or hundredweight) at which the Commodity
Credit Corporation provides commodity-secured loans to farmers for
a specified period of time.
Competitive grantsFunds that are allocated by panels
of relevant scientific peers after consideration of research proposals
submitted to the review panel.
Conservation of Private Grazing Land InitiativeThe
1996 Farm Act authorized a coordinated technical, educational, and
related assistance program for owners and managers of non-Federal
grazing lands, including rangeland, pasture land, grazed forest
land, and hay land. The purpose of the program is to enhance water
quality and wildlife and fish habitat, address weed and brush problems,
enhance recreational opportunities, and maintain and improve the
aesthetic character of non-Federal grazing lands.
Conservation planA combination
of land uses and farming practices to protect and improve soil productivity
and water quality and prevent deterioration of natural resources
on all or part of a farm. Conservation plans for conservation compliance
must be both technically and economically feasible.
Conservation practiceAny technique or measure used
to protect soil and water resources, for which standards and specifications
for installation, operation, or maintenance have been developed.
Practices approved by the Natural Resources Conservation Service
are compiled at each conservation district in its field office technical
guide.
Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program
(CREP)This program was initiated following the 1996 farm
bill. CREP is a State-Federal conservation partnership program targeted
to address specific State and nationally significant water quality,
soil erosion, and wildlife habitat issues related to agriculture.
The program offers additional financial incentives beyond the CRP
to encourage farmers and ranchers to enroll in 10-15 year contracts
to retire land from production. CREP is funded through CCC.
Conservation Reserve Program (CRP)Established
in its current form in 1985 and administered by USDAs Farm
Services Agency, this is the latest version of long-term land retirement
programs used in the 1930s and 1960s. CRP provides farm owners or
operators with an annual per-acre rental payment and half the cost
of establishing a permanent land cover, in exchange for retiring
environmentally sensitive cropland from production for 10-15 years.
In 1996, Congress reauthorized CRP for an additional round of contracts,
limiting enrollment to 36.4 million acres at any time. The 2002
Farm Act increased the enrollment limit to 39 million acres. Producers
can offer land for competitive bidding based on an Environmental
Benefits Index during periodic signups or automatically enroll more
limited acreages in such practices as riparian buffers, field windbreaks,
and grass strips on a continuous basis. CRP is funded through the
Commodity Credit Corporation.
Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) Continuous
Sign-upThis program was initiated following the 1996 farm
bill. Continuous sign-up allows enrollment of land in riparian buffers,
filter strips, grass waterways, and other high priority practices
without competition. Eligible land is automatically accepted into
the program. A total of 4 million acres (under the CRP acreage cap)
are reserved for continuous sign-up enrollment.
Conservation Security Program (CSP)This
newly created program will provide payments to producers for maintaining
or adopting structural and/or land management practices that address
a wide range of local and/or national resource concerns. As with
Environmental Quality Incentives Program, a wide range of practices
can be subsidized. But CSP will focus on land-based practices and
specifically excludes livestock waste handling facilities. Producers
can participate at one of three tiers; higher tiers require greater
conservation effort and offer higher payments. The lowest cost practices
that meet conservation standards must be used.
Conservation Technical Assistance (CTA)Since
1936, CTA, administered by USDAs Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS) and local conservation districts, has provided technical
assistance to farmers for planning and implementing soil and water
conservation and water quality practices. Farmers adopting practices
under USDA conservation programs and other producers requesting
assistance in adopting approved NRCS practices can receive technical
assistance. In recent years, CTA has prepared conservation plans
for highly erodible lands to help farmers maintain eligibility for
USDA program benefits.
Conserving use acreageFarmland diverted from crop
production to an approved cultural practice that prevents erosion
or other degradation. Though crops are not produced, conserving
use is considered an agricultural use of the land.
Considered plantedRefers to a provision of the Agricultural
Act of 1949 that was used to implement the base acreage and yield
system for 1991-95 crops, a provision suspended by the FAIR Act
of 1996. Acreage considered planted includes acreage idled for weather-related
reasons or natural disasters, acreage devoted to conservation purposes
or planted to certain other allowed commodities, and acreage USDA
determines is necessary to include for fair and equitable treatment.
Contract acreageLand
voluntarily enrolled in a production flexibility contract (PFC)
under the 1996 Farm Act. Land was eligible for the PFC enrollment
if it had at least one crop acreage base for a contract crop that
would have been in effect for 1996 under previous farm law, prior
to its suspension by the 1996 Act. A farmer could voluntarily choose
to reduce contract acreage in subsequent years. Upon leaving the
Conservation Reserve Program, base acreage under previous farm law
could be entered into a PFC. Otherwise, the maximum amount of contract
acreage was established during the one-time signup for the PFC in
1996.
Contract cropsCrops eligible for production flexibility
contract payments under Title I of the 1996 Act: wheat, corn, sorghum,
barley, oats, rice, and upland cotton.
Cost-sharingPayments to producers
to cover a specified portion of the cost of installing, implementing,
or maintaining a conservation (structural or land management) practice.
Counter-cyclical paymentCounter-cyclical payments
are available to eligible commodities under the 2002 Farm Act whenever
the effective commodity price is less than the target price. The
effective price is equal to the sum of 1) the higher of the national
average farm price for the marketing year, or the commodity national
loan rate and 2) the direct payment rate for the commodity. The
payment amount for a farmer equals the product of the payment rate,
the payment acres, and the payment yield. Payments are considered
counter-cyclical since they vary inversely with market prices.
Crop insuranceInsurance that protects farmers from
crop losses due to natural hazards. A subsidized multiperil Federal
insurance program, administered by the USDA's Risk Management Agency,
is available to most farmers. Federal crop insurance is sold and
serviced through private insurance companies. The Federal Government
subsidizes a portion of the premium, as well as some administrative
and operating expenses of the private companies. The Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation reinsures the companies by absorbing the losses
of the program when indemnities exceed total premiums. Various types
of yield and revenue insurance products are available for major
crops. Hail and fire insurance are offered through private companies
without Federal subsidy.
CroplandLand used primarily for the production
of row crops, close-growing crops, and fruit and nut crops. It includes cultivated
and noncultivated acreage, but not land enrolled in the Conservation
Reserve Program. For details on land use of U.S. non-Federal lands, see USDA National Resources Conservation Services' National Resources Inventory.
Crop year (marketing year)The 12-month
period starting with the month when the harvest of a specific crop
typically begins. The 1998 wheat crop year, for example, is June
1, 1998, through May 30, 1999. The amount harvested during this
time is then considered the 1998 crop.
Dairy Export Incentive ProgramA program that offers
subsidies to exporters of U.S. dairy products based on the volume
of exports. The intent is to make the U.S. products more competitive
in world markets, thereby increasing U.S. exports. The Commodity
Credit Corporation receives export-price bids from exporters and
makes the payments either in cash or through certificates redeemable
for commodities. The program was originally authorized by the 1985
farm acts, and reauthorized by subsequent Acts. The 2002 Farm Act
extends the program through 2007.
Decoupled paymentsGovernment program payments to farmers
that are not linked to the current levels of production, prices,
or resource use. When payments are decoupled, farmers make production
decisions based on expected market returns rather than expected
government payments.
Deficiency paymentsDirect
government payments made prior to 1996 to farmers who participated
in an annual commodity program for wheat, feed grains, rice, or
cotton. The crop-specific payment rate for a particular crop year
was based on the difference between an established target price
and the higher of the commodity loan rate or the national average
market price for the commodity during a specified time period. A
deficiency payment to the farmer was calculated as the product of
the payment rate, the farm's eligible payment acreage, and the farm's
established program payment yield.
De minimis ruleThe total aggregate measurement of
support (AMS) includes a specific commodity support only if it equals
more than 5 percent of its value of production for developed countries
such as the United States. The noncommodity-specific support component
of the AMS is included in the AMS total only if it exceeds 5 percent
of the value of total agricultural output. The de minimis exemption
for developing countries is 10 percent.
Direct paymentFixed payments provided under the 2002
Farm Act for eligible producers of wheat, corn, barley, grain sorghum,
oats, upland cotton, rice, soybeans, other oilseeds, and peanuts.
Producers enroll annually in the program to receive payments based
on payment rates specified in the 2002 Farm Act and their historic
program payment acres and yields.
Disaster paymentPayments made to producers through
existing or special legislation due to crop and livestock losses
because of natural disasters such as floods, drought, hail, excessive
moisture, or related conditions.
Diversion paymentSee
paid land diversion.
Environmental Quality Incentives Program
(EQIP)EQIP was established by the 1996 Farm Act as a new
program to consolidate and better target the functions of the Agricultural
Conservation Program, Water Quality Incentives Program, Great Plains
Conservation Program, and Colorado River Basin Salinity Program.
The objective of EQIP, like its predecessor programs, is to encourage
farmers and ranchers to adopt practices that reduce environmental
and resource problems through 5- to 10-year contracts. The program
provides education, technical assistance and financial assistance,
targeted to watersheds, regions, or areas of special environmental
sensitivity identified as priority areas. The 1996 Farm Act called
for half of EQIP funds to be devoted to conservation practices related
to livestock production and for maximized environmental benefits
per dollar expended. EQIP is designed to consider all sources of
conservation funding from CRP, Wetland Reserve Program, other Federal
programs, State or local programs, and nongovernmental partners.
Proposed projects with greater funding from these sources receive
more favorable scoring for EQIP funding. EQIP is run by Natural
Resources Conservation Service and funded through Commodity Credit
Corporation.
Erodibility Index (EI)The natural
erosion potential of a soil divided by the soil's tolerance level.
Export Enhancement Program (EEP)Started
in May 1985 under the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act to
help U.S. exporters meet competitors' prices in subsidized markets.
Under the EEP, exporters receive subsidies based on the volume of
exports to specifically targeted countries. The program was reauthorized
by the 1985 Farm Act and subsequent farm acts. The 2002 Act extends
the program through 2007.
Farmed wetlandFarmed wetlands
are wetlands that have been partially drained or are naturally dry
enough to allow crop production in some years but otherwise meet
the soil, hydrological, and vegetative criteria defining a wetland.
Farmland Protection Program (FPP)Established
in the 1996 Farm Act, FPP provides funding to State, local, or tribal
entities with existing farmland protection programs to purchase
conservation easements or other interests in order to keep agricultural
land in farming. The goal of the program, run by Natural Resources
Conservation Service, is to protect between 170,000 and 340,000
acres of farmland. Priority is given to applications for perpetual
easements, although a minimum of 30 years is required.
Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of 1996 (1996
Act) (P.L. 104-127)The omnibus food and agriculture legislation
(Farm Act) signed into law on April 4, 1996, that provided a 7-year
framework (1996-2002) for the Secretary of Agriculture to administer
various agricultural and food programs. The 1996 Act redesigned
income support and supply management programs for producers of wheat,
corn, grain sorghum, barley, oats, rice, and upland cotton. Production
flexibility contract payments were made available under Title I
of the 1996 Act (see Agricultural Market Transition
Act). Acreage reduction programs were suspended. Federal milk
marketing orders were revised and consolidated under the Act. Program
changes were also made for sugar and peanuts. Trade programs were
targeted and environmental programs were consolidated and extended
in the 1996 Act.
Federal Crop Insurance ProgramA subsidized insurance
program providing farmers with a means to manage the risk of crop
losses resulting from natural disasters. With the Federal Crop Insurance
Reform Act of 1994, coverage is classified as "catastrophic"
(CAT) or "additional." CAT coverage guarantees 50 percent
of a farmer's average yield, at 55 percent of the expected price,
for a nominal processing fee. Additional coverage, sometimes called
"buy-up," provides higher levels of coverage.
Federal milk marketing ordersRegulations
issued by the Secretary of Agriculture specifying minimum prices
that processors must pay for milk and other conditions under which
milk can be bought and sold within a specified area. The orders
classify and fix minimum prices according to the products for which
milk is used. The 1996 Farm Act required consolidation of the Federal
milk marketing orders into 10-14 regional orders, down from 33.
Flex acreageSee normal
flex acreage and optional flex
acreage.
Food, Agriculture, Conservation and Trade Act of 1990 (1990
Act) (P.L. 101-624)Omnibus food and agriculture legislation
signed into law on November 28, 1990, that provided a 5-year framework
(1991-95) for the Secretary of Agriculture to administer various
agricultural and food programs. Commodity programs were continued,
with modifications, such as creation of optional flex acreage, making
the programs more market oriented.
Food Security Act of 1985 (1985 Act) (P.L. 99-198)Omnibus
food and agriculture legislation signed into law on December 23,
1985, that provided a 5-year framework (1986-90) for the Secretary
of Agriculture to administer various agricultural and food programs.
The law provided for lower price and income supports, a dairy herd
buy-out program, marketing loans and loan deficiency payments, and
the Conservation Reserve Program.
Food Security Commodity ReserveRenamed the Bill Emerson
Humanitarian Trust, formerly the Food Security Wheat Reserve, a
special wheat, corn, grain sorghum, and rice reserve of up to 4
million metric tons, to be used for humanitarian purposes. Created
by the Agriculture Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-494), the reserve is generally
used to provide famine and other emergency relief when commodities
are not available under P.L. 480. The 1996 Farm Act expands the
reserve to include corn, grain sorghum, and rice in addition to
wheat, and makes other administrative changes.
Formula fundsFormula funds consist of funds allocated
equally to all States and funds allocated by formula. The Amended
Hatch Act (1955) established a formula for distributing Hatch Act
funds based on (among other things) the number of farms and percentage
of rural population in a State. In addition to Hatch funds, the
McIntire-Stennis Act provided for research funds to State Agricultural
Experiment Stations and forestry schools. Evans-Allan appropriations
are formula funds granted to the 1890 Institutions and Tuskegee
University. Animal Health and Disease Research funds are also administered
by the Cooperative State Research, Extension, and Education Service
of the USDA.
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)An international
agreement originally negotiated in 1947 to increase international
trade by reducing tariffs and other trade barriers. The agreement
provides a code of conduct for international commerce and a framework
for periodic multilateral negotiations on trade liberalization and
expansion. The Uruguay Round Trade Agreement modified the code and
the framework and established the World Trade Organization on January
1, 1995, to replace the institutions created by the GATT.
Grassland Reserve Program (GRP)This
newly established program will assist owners, through long-term
contracts or easements, in restoring grassland and conserving virgin
grassland. Up to 2 million
acres of restored, improved, or natural grassland, rangeland, and
pasture, including prairie, can be enrolled. Tracts must be at least
40 contiguous acres, subject to waivers. Eligible grassland can
be enrolled under 10- to 30-year contracts or under 30-year or permanent
easements.
Green box policiesDomestic or trade policies that
are deemed to be minimally trade distorting and that are excluded
from domestic support reduction commitments in the Uruguay Round
Agreement on Agriculture. Examples are domestic policies dealing
with research, extension, inspection and grading, environmental
and conservation programs, disaster relief, crop insurance, domestic
food assistance, food security stocks, structural adjustment programs,
and direct payments not linked to production. Trade measures or
policies, such as export market promotion, are also exempt (but
not export subsidies or foreign food aid).
High-tier tariff rateSee over-quota
tariff rate.
Highly erodible land (HEL)Soils
with an erodibility index (EI) equal to or greater than eight are
defined as HEL. An EI of eight indicates that without any cover
or conservation practices, the soil will erode at a rate eight times
the soil tolerance level. Fields containing at least one-third or
50 acres (whichever is less) of HEL are designated as highly erodible
for the purpose of Highly-Erodible Land Conservation Provisions.
Highly Erodible Land Conservation (Compliance
and Sodbuster)First established in 1985, this provision
requires that farm program participants with highly erodible cropland
develop and implement an approved conservation plan for their land
to maintain program eligibility. Conservation compliance pertains
to farming existing cropland but is commonly known as the Sodbuster
provision when applied to newly planted cropland. Natural Resources
Conservation Service certifies technical compliance, and USDA's
Farm Services Agency administers changes in farm program benefits.
IFAFSInitiative for Future Agriculture
and Food Systems.
Incentive paymentsPayments
to producers in an amount or at a rate necessary to encourage producers
to adopt one or more land management practices.
Initiative for Future Agriculture and
Food Systems (IFAFS)Research, extension, and education
grants to address critical emerging agricultural issues related
to 1) future food production, 2) environmental quality and natural
resource management, or 3) farm income; and also for activities
carried out under the Alternative Agricultural Research and Commercialization
Act of 1990. IFAFS was a new initiative authorized in the Agricultural
Research, Extension and Education Reform Act of 1998.
Land-Grant InstitutionsOriginally,
Land-Grant Colleges and University were educational institutions
that arose from or met the mission of the Land-Grant College Act
of 1862, also known as the Morrill Act of 1862. The legislation
provided funding for institutions of higher learning in each State.
Each State received 30,000 acres of federal land per congressional
representative. The land was intended for sale to provide an endowment
for at least one college where the leading object was learning related
to agriculture and the mechanical arts. The original act was supplemented
through the years to provide additional funding for the Land Grant
Institutions. Also, additional colleges and universities with land-grant
status were established, and certain existing institutions have
received land-grant status (see 1890s colleges/universities
and 1994 Institutions).
Land management practiceA conservation practice that
is carried out as part of production management. For example, nutrient
or manure management, integrated pest management, irrigation management,
tillage or residue management, and grazing management are land management
practices.
Loan deficiency paymentsA provision initiated in the
Food Security Act of 1985 giving the Secretary of Agriculture the
discretion to provide direct payments to wheat, feed grain, upland
cotton, rice, or oilseed producers who agree not to obtain a commodity
loan on their production for a particular crop year. Loan deficiency
payments (LDP) continue to be available for all loan commodities
except extra-long staple cotton. The LDP provision is applicable
only if a marketing loan provision has been implemented; in which
case a commodity loan may be repaid at a price less than the original
loan rate (the repayment rate). The intent of these two provisions
is to minimize the accumulation of stocks by the government, minimize
the costs of government storage, and allow U.S. commodities to be
marketed freely and competitively. The LDP payment amount is determined
by multiplying the local marketing loan payment rate by the amount
of the commodity eligible for a loan. The marketing loan payment
rate at a point in time is the announced local commodity loan rate
minus the then current local repayment rate for marketing loans.
Loan rateSee Commodity loan rate.
Market Access Program (MAP)Formerly the Market Promotion
Program, designed to encourage development, maintenance, and expansion
of commercial commodity exports to specific markets. Participating
organizations include nonprofit trade associations, state regional
trade groups, and private companies. Fund authority is capped at
$90 million annually for fiscal years 2002-07.
Market loss assistance paymentsPayments
authorized by emergency legislation in 1998-2001. Payments were
made to recipients of production flexibility contract payments.
Similar payments were also authorized for oilseed and dairy producers
for selected years.
Marketing allotmentsWhen
in effect, provide each processor or producer of a specified commodity
a specific limit on sales for the year, above which penalties would
apply. Sugar allotments, for example, were authorized during 1991-95,
suspended by the 1996 Farm Act, and reauthorized under the 2002
Farm Act.
Marketing assessmentsA
fee, or charge per unit of domestic production or sales, that producers,
processors, or first purchasers must pay to the Government to help
pay for commodity program costs.
Marketing loan programProvisions
first authorized by the Food Security Act of 1985 (P.L. 99-198)
that allow producers to repay nonrecourse commodity loans at less
than the announced loan rate whenever the world price or loan repayment
rate for the commodity is less than the loan rate. Prior to 1985,
commodity loans had to be repaid at the original loan rate, which
often resulted in the accumulation of surplus commodities in Government
inventories. Marketing loan provisions are aimed at reducing government
costs of stock accumulation. Marketing loan provisions were originally
mandated only for rice and upland cotton. The Secretary of Agriculture
had the option of implementing marketing loans for wheat, feed grains,
soybeans, and honey under the 1985 Farm Act and the subsequent farm
acts. The 1996 Farm Act mandates that marketing loan provisions
be implemented for feed grains, wheat, rice, upland cotton, and
all oilseeds. The 2002 Farm Act established marketing loan provisions
for peanuts, chickpeas, lentils, dry beans, wool, mohair, and honey.
Marketing ordersFederal marketing orders authorize
agricultural producers in a designated region to take various actions
to promote orderly marketing, such as influencing supply and quality
and pooling funds for promotion and research. Marketing orders are
initiated by the industry, but must be approved by the Secretary
of Agriculture and by a vote among affected producers. Once approved,
a marketing order is mandatory for all producers in the marketing
order area. There are marketing orders for a number of fruits, nuts,
and vegetables, and for milk.
Marketing yearSee Crop year.
Milk marketing ordersSee Federal milk
marketing orders.
The National Research Initiatives for Food,
Agriculture and Environment of 1990The 1990 Farm Act extended
the role of competitive grants within USDA by formalizing the competitive
process via the National Research Initiatives for Food, Agriculture
and Environment.
No net costA requirement that
a price support program be operated at no cost to the Federal Government.
The No-Net-Cost Act of 1982 required participants in the 1982 and
subsequent tobacco programs to pay an assessment to cover potential
losses in operating the tobacco price support program. A no-net-cost
provision for sugar was initiated under the Food Security Act of
1985, suspended under the 1996 Farm Act, and reimplemented under
the 2002 Farm Act.
Nonrecourse loan programProvides
commodity-secured loans to producers for a specified period of time
(typically 9 months), after which producers may either repay the
loan and accrued interest or transfer ownership of the commodity
pledged as collateral to the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC)
as full settlement of the loan, without penalty. These loans are
available on a crop year basis for wheat, feed grains, cotton, peanuts,
tobacco, rice, and oilseeds. Sugar processors are also eligible
for nonrecourse loans. Participants in commodity loan programs agree
to store and maintain a certain quantity of a commodity as loan
collateral, for which they receive loan funds from the CCC based
on the announced commodity-specific, per-unit loan rate. The loans
are called nonrecourse because, at the producers option, the
CCC has no recourse but to accept the commodity as full settlement
of the loan. For those commodities eligible for marketing loan benefits,
producers may repay the loan at the world price (rice and upland
cotton) or posted county price (wheat, feed grains, and oilseeds).
Some commodity loans are recourse loans, meaning producers must
pay back the loans in cash.
Nontariff barriers (NTB)-Any restriction, charge, or policy
other than a tariff that limits access of imported goods. Examples
of nontariff barriers include quantitative restrictions, mainly
import quotas and embargoes; import licenses; exchange controls;
some practices of state trading enterprises; and certain rules and
regulations on health, safety, and sanitation. The Uruguay Round
Agreement on Agriculture requires that NTBs be converted to bound
tariffs and tariff-rate quotas and that sanitary and phytosanitary
measures be based on sound science.
Normal flex acreageA
term given to the 15 percent of a farmer's acreage base that was
not eligible for deficiency payments during 1991-95. Under planting
flexibility provisions, however, producers were allowed to plant
any crop on this normal flex acreage, except fruits, vegetables,
and some other prohibited crops.
NRIThe National Research Initiatives
for Food, Agriculture and Environment of 1990.
OilseedsSoybeans, sunflower seed, canola, rapeseed,
safflower, mustard seed, and flaxseed.
Olympic averageA 5-year average,
dropping the highest and lowest values.
The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-508)A
law covering a range of government budget issues that also amended
the 1990 Farm Act to address budgetary concerns for 1991-95. It
mandated a reduction in payment acreage equal to 15 percent of base
acreage and established assessments on certain crop loans and incentive
payments.
Optional flex acreageA
term given to an additional 10 percent of a farmer's acreage base
in 1991-95 beyond the 15 percent normal flex acreage that farmers
could choose to plant to crops other than the base program crop.
Under the planting flexibility provision of the 1990 Farm Act, producers
could choose to plant up to 25 percent of their base acreage for
a specific crop to other CCC-specified crops (except fruits and
vegetables) without a reduction in their base acreage. Optional
flex acreage was eligible for deficiency payments when planted to
the original program crop. However, no deficiency payments would
be received on optional flex acreage if planted to another crop.
Other oilseedsSunflower seed,
canola, rapeseed, safflower, mustard seed, and flaxseed.
Over-quota tariffThe tariff applied
on imports in excess of the quota volume. The over-quota tariff
is greater than the in-quota tariff.
Paid land diversionPrograms
that offered payments to producers for reduction of planted acreage
of program crops, if the Secretary determined that planted acreage
should be reduced more than under ARPs. Farmers were given a specific
payment per acre idled. The idled acreage was in addition to an
acreage reduction program. This program has continued to be authorized
under the 1996 and 2002 Farm Acts.
Parity-based support pricesCommodity support prices
(such as loan rates or commodity program purchase prices) whose
level in a given year is mandated to be calculated in a way that
will maintain the commoditys purchasing power at the level
it had in the 1910-14 base period. Under permanent provisions
of farm legislation (provisions that would automatically apply in
the absence of current farm acts that suspended the permanent provisions),
prices of some commodities would be supported at 50-90 percent of
parity through direct government purchases or nonrecourse loans.
Payment acresEqual to 85 percent of the base acres
for calculating direct and counter-cyclical payments under the provisions
of the 2002 Farm Act.
Payment limitationThe maximum annual
amount of commodity program benefits a person can receive by law.
Persons are defined under payment limitation regulations, established
by USDA, to be individuals, members of joint operations, or entities,
such as limited partnerships, corporations, associations, trusts,
and estates, that are actively engaged in farming. The 2002 Farm
Act sets payment limits at $40,000 per person per fiscal year for
direct payments, sets a limit of $65,000 for counter-cyclical payments,
and limits marketing loan benefits to $75,000. The three-entity
rule limits the number of farms from which a person can receive
program payments. Producers with adjusted gross income of over $2.5
million, averaged over 3 years, are not eligible for payments, unless
more than 75 percent of adjusted gross income is from agriculture.
Payment yield (also called program
yield)Farm commodity yield of record (per acre), determined
by a procedure outlined in legislation. Payment yields for direct
payments are unchanged since 1985. Under the 2002 Farm Act, producers
could update payment yields for counter-cyclical payments during
the initial enrollment in 2002 by adding 70 percent of the difference
between program yields for 2002 crops and the farm's average yields
for the 1998-2001 to program yields, or by using 93.5 percent of
1998-2001 average yields.
Peanut poundage quotaThe maximum
quantity of peanuts that was eligible for the higher of two price
support loan rates under legislation prior to 2002. The Food and
Agriculture Act of 1977 (P.L. 95-113) initiated the current two-price
poundage quota program for peanuts where a national poundage quota
is established and each producer receives a share of the national
total. Producers can market more than their quota, but only the
quota amount is eligible for domestic edible use and for the higher
of the two commodity loan rates. Over-quota marketings are called
additional peanuts and can only be sold for export or
processing (crush). Under the 1990 Farm Act, each years national
peanut poundage quota was set equal to estimated domestic use of
peanuts for food products and seed, subject to a minimum 1.35 million
tons. The 1996 Farm Act redefined the national poundage quota to
exclude seed use and eliminated the 1.35-million-ton minimum. The
1996 Act also permits the sale, lease, and transfer of a quota across
county lines within a State up to specified amounts of quota annually.
This program was ended under the 2002 Farm Act.
Permanent legislationLegislation that would be in
effect in the absence of all temporary amendments (farm acts). These
laws include provisions of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938,
the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act of 1948, and the Agricultural
Act of 1949. They serve as the basic laws authorizing the major
commodity programs. Generally, each new farm act amends the permanent
legislation for a specified period.
Posted county price (PCP)Calculated
for wheat and feed grains for each county by USDA's Farm Service
Agency, the PCP reflects price changes in major terminal grain markets
(of which there are 18 in the United States) corrected for the cost
of transporting grain from the county to the terminal. PCP is used
under the marketing loan repayment provisions and loan deficiency
payment provisions of the wheat and feed grains commodity programs.
Rice and cotton use an adjusted world price as the proxy for local
market prices.
Precision agricultureAn
integrated information and production-based farming system designed
to increase long-term, site-specific, and whole-farm production
efficiencies, productivity, and profitability while minimizing unintended
impacts on wildlife and the environment.
Prevented planting acreageLand
on which a farmer intended to plant a program crop or insurable
crop but was unable to do so because of drought, flood, or other
natural disaster. Used in the calculation of disaster payments and
crop insurance indemnity payments.
Price support loansSee Nonrecourse
loan program.
Production flexibility contract (AMTA) paymentsPayments
to farmers during 1996-2002 who enrolled "contract acreage,"
under Title I, Subtitle B of the 1996 Farm Act. The annual total
amount was first determined for all contract crops combined (wheat,
rice, feed grains, and upland cotton) and then allocated to specific
crops based on percentage allocation factors established in the
1996 Act. Each participating producer of a contract crop received
payments equal to the product of their production flexibility contract
payment quantity and the national average production flexibility
contract payment rate.
Production flexibility contract payment quantityThe
quantity of production eligible for production flexibility contract
payments under the 1996 Farm Act. Payment quantity is calculated
as the farms program yield (per acre) multiplied by 85 percent
of the farms contract acreage.
Production flexibility contract payment rateThe amount
paid to farmers per unit of participating production under the 1996
Farm Act. A farms contract acreage and farm program payment
yield was established in 1996 during the sign-up period. A national
average payment rate per unit for each crop was calculated each
year based on the then total participating production (production
flexibility contract quantity) and the total amount to be paid out
for each crop, largely predetermined by the 1996 Act.
Program cropsCrops
for which Federal support programs are available to producers, including
wheat, corn, barley, grain sorghum, oats, extra long staple and
upland cotton, rice, oilseeds, tobacco, peanuts, and sugar.
Program payment yieldThe farm commodity yield of record
(per acre), determined by a procedure outlined in legislation. Previous
law allowed USDA to make individual farm program yields equal to
the average of the preceding 5 years harvested yield (dropping
the highest and lowest yield years). This provision has not been
implemented in recent years. Program yields continue to be frozen
at 1985 levels.
Program yieldSee payment yield.
Public Law 480 (P.L. 480)Common
name for the Agricultural Trade Development and Assistance Act of
1954, which seeks to expand foreign markets for U.S. agricultural
products, combat hunger, and encourage economic progress in developing
countries. Title I of P.L. 480, also called the Food for Peace Program,
makes U.S. agricultural commodities available through long-term
dollar credit sales at low interest rates for up to 30 years. Government
donations for humanitarian food needs are provided under Title II.
Title III authorizes "food for development" grants.
Recourse loan programA provision allowing farmers
or processors participating in Government commodity programs to
pledge a quantity of a commodity as collateral and obtain a loan
from the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC), subject to the condition
that the borrower must repay the loan with interest within a specified
period. This provision is unlike the condition with nonrecourse
loans whereby producers may settle their loans by giving the collateral
to the CCC.
Revenue insuranceAn insurance policy offered to farmers
that pays indemnities based on revenue shortfalls. These programs
are subsidized and reinsured by USDAs Risk Management Agency.
RFPRequest for Proposals.
SAESState Agricultural
Experiment Stations.
Safety netA policy that ensures a minimum income,
consumption, or wage level for everyone in a society or subgroup.
It may also provide people (businesses) with protection against
risks, such as lost income, limited access to credit, or devastation
from natural disasters.
Section 32Section 32 of Agricultural
Adjustment Act Amendment of 1935 was enacted to widen market outlets
for surplus agricultural commodities as one means of strengthening
farm prices. Section 32 programs are financed by a permanent appropriation
equal to 30 percent of the import duties collected on all items
entering the United States under the customs laws, plus any unused
balances up to $300 million. Most funds are annually transferred
by appropriators to pay for child nutrition programs.
Section 416A section of the
Agricultural Act of 1949 that provides for the disposition of agricultural
commodities held by the Commodity Credit Corporation to prevent
waste. Disposal is usually carried out by donation of commodities
to charitable groups and foreign governments.
Special grantsThe Special Research Grants Act of 1965
created a mechanism for the distribution of funds to State Agricultural
Experiment Stations, public institutions, and individuals to study
problems of concern to USDA, as defined by Congress. Sometimes referred
to as earmarked funds.
State Agricultural Experiment Stations
(SAES)SAES work with land-grant universities to carry
out a joint research-teaching-extension mission. The Hatch Act of
1887 offered States the option of establishing stations to perform
science-based research and acquire and disseminate information of
use to the agricultural sector. Each State (as well as some territories)
now has an SAES and some States have additional substations as well.
The SAES cooperate closely with USDA.
Structural practiceA practice
that involves a constructed facility, land shaping, or permanent
vegetative cover. Examples include animal waste-management facilities,
terraces, grassed waterways, contour grass strips, filterstrips,
tailwater pits, permanent wildlife habitats, and constructed wetlands.
Target pricePrices established in the 2002 Farm Act
used for calculating counter-cyclical payments (CCP) for wheat,
corn, grain sorghum, barley, oats, rice, upland cotton, oilseeds,
and peanuts. Target prices are fixed for 2002-03 and then raised
to fixed levels for 2004-07, except for soybeans and rice, which
remain at the 2002-03 levels. Prior to 1996, target prices were
used to calculate deficiency payments.
Tariff-rate quota (TRQ)An import
restriction system based on tariffs and quantity quotas agreed to
in the Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture. A certain quantity
of imports, called the quota amount, is allowed to enter a country
after payment of a relatively low tariff. A higher, over-quota tariff
is imposed for imported quantities above the quota amount.
Three-entity ruleLimits the number of farms from which
a person can receive program payments. Under the rule, an individual
can receive a full payment directly and up to a half payment from
two additional entities.
Thrifty Food Plan (TFP)The TFP is
one of four USDA-designed food plans specifying foods and amounts
of foods to provide adequate nutrition. Used as the basis for designing
Food Stamp Program benefits, it is the lowest cost food plan that
can be priced monthly using the price data collected for the consumer
price index. The monthly cost of the TFP used for the Food Stamp
Program represents a national average of prices (four-person household
consisting of an adult couple and two school-age children) adjusted
for other household sizes through the use of a formula reflecting
economies of scale. For food stamp purposes, the TFP as priced each
June sets maximum benefit levels for the fiscal year beginning the
following October.
Uruguay Round (UR)The multilateral trade negotiations
under the auspices of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT) during 1986-94, leading up to the Uruguay Round Agreement
on Agriculture, among other provisions. The Agreement on Agriculture
covers four areas: export subsidies, market (or import) access,
internal (or domestic) supports, and sanitary and phytosanitary
rules. The agreement was implemented over a 6-year period, 1995-2000.
Wetlands Conservation (Swampbuster)First
established in 1985, the so-called Swampbuster provision states
that farmers or ranchers lose eligibility for farm program benefits
if they produce an agricultural commodity on a wetland converted
after December 23, 1985, or if they convert a wetland after November
28, 1990, and make agricultural production possible on the land.
Natural Resources Conservation Service certifies technical compliance,
and USDA's Farm Services Agency administers changes in farm program
benefits.
Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP)Congress
authorized WRP under the 1985 Farm Act. Natural Resources Conservation
Service administers the program in consultation with USDA's Farm
Services Agency and other Federal agencies. WRP is funded through
Commodity Credit Corporation and has an enrollment cap of 1,075,000
acres. Landowners who choose to participate in WRP may sell a permanent
or 30-year conservation easement or enter into a 10-year cost-share
restoration agreement to restore and protect wetlands. The landowner
voluntarily limits future use of the land yet retains private ownership.
USDA pays 100 percent of restoration costs for permanent easements
and 75 percent for 30-year easements and restoration cost-share
agreements.
Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program (WHIP)The
1996 Farm Act created WHIP to provide cost-sharing assistance to
landowners for developing habitat for upland wildlife, wetland wildlife,
threatened and endangered species, fish, and other types of wildlife.
Participating landowners, with the assistance of the Natural Resources
Conservation Service district office, develop plans for installing
wildlife habitat development practices and requirements for maintaining
the habitat for the 5- to 10-year life of the agreement. Cost-share
payments of up to 75 percent may be used to establish and maintain
practices. Cooperating State wildlife agencies and nonprofit or
private organizations may provide expertise or additional funding
to help complete a project. WHIP funds are distributed to States
based on State wildlife habitat priorities, which may include wildlife
habitat areas, targeted species and their habitats, and specific
practices.
World price (rice)As part of the rice marketing assistance
loan program, USDA calculates the world price for each class of
milled rice (long grain, medium grain, and short grain) based on
the prevailing world market price for each of the classes, modified
to reflect U.S. quality and the U.S. cost of exporting milled rice.
USDA sets this prevailing market price after reviewing milled rice
prices in major world markets, and taking into account the effects
of supply-demand changes, government-assisted sales, and other relevant
price indicators. The steps for calculating and announcing the world
prices are prescribed in more detail in Federal regulations.
World Trade Organization (WTO)An
international organization established by the Uruguay Round trade
agreement to replace the institution created by the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade, known as the GATT. The Uruguay Round trade
agreement modified the code and the framework and established the
WTO on January 1, 1995. The WTO provides a code of conduct for international
commerce and a framework for periodic multilateral negotiations
on trade liberalization and expansion.
0,50/85-92 provisionsRefers to the
so-called 50/85 and 50/92 provisions for rice and cotton and the
0/85 and 0/92 provisions for wheat and feed grains that were in
effect in various forms from 1986 through 1995. Under these provisions,
farmers could idle all or part of their permitted acreage, putting
the idled land in a conserving use, and still receive deficiency
payments for part of the acreage. A minimum planting requirement
of 50 percent of maximum payment acreage was required in order to
receive these payments in the case of rice and cotton.
1862 colleges/universitiesThe original land grant
colleges and universities established by the Land Grant College
Act of 1862 (see Land-Grant Institutions).
1890s colleges/universitiesThese
institutions resulted from provisions of the second Morrill Act,
which forbid racial discrimination in Land-Grant Colleges and Universities.
States had the option of creating separate institutions to serve
African-American students. The Southern States elected to have separate
educational institutions, sometimes referred to as "historically
black colleges and universities." While not a land-grant college,
Tuskegee University traditionally has been associated with the African-American
land-grant institutions. It was granted 25,000 acres of land by
the U.S. Congress in 1899 and has espoused the land-grant philosophy
throughout its history.
1994 InstitutionsLand-Grant Institutions
that traditionally served Native Americans. The Equity in Educational
Land-Grant Status Act of 1994 conferred land-grant status for 29
tribal colleges that address agriculture and mechanical arts.
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