USDA Economic Research Service Data Sets
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2002 Farm Bill

The 2002 Farm Bill:
Provisions and Economic Implications

Contents
 
 

Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002, which governs Federal farm programs for the next 6 years, was signed into law on May 13, 2002. Its provisions support the production of a reliable, safe, and affordable supply of food and fiber; promote stewardship of agricultural land and water resources; facilitate access to American farm products at home and abroad; encourage continued economic and infrastructure development in rural America; and ensure continued research to maintain an efficient and innovative agricultural and food sector.

Among the bill's highlights: Alters the farm payment program and introduces counter-cyclical farm income support; expands conservation land retirement programs and emphasizes on-farm environmental practices; relaxes rules to make more borrowers eligible for Federal farm credit assistance; restores food stamp eligibility for legal immigrants; adds various commodities to those requiring country-of-origin labeling; introduces provisions on animal welfare.

Side by side: old and new. On the following pages is a side-by-side comparison of the new farm bill with 1996-2001 farm legislation. Summarized but substantive, it offers a time-saving reference to farm bill provisions.

For information on previous farm bills, see Farm Policy Background, Program Provisions, and History in the Farm and Commodity Policy Briefing Room.

Economic analysis. ERS Agricultural Information Bulletin, The 2002 Farm Act: Provisions and Implications for Commodity Markets, assesses the impacts of the commodity provisions on the U.S. agricultural sector.

Details and Analysis button. Click on these buttons for more in-depth analysis.

 

Click on these buttons in the side-by-side comparisons for additional details and ERS analysis.

For more information, contact: Farm policy team

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: May 22, 2002