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Where do farm payments go? Now we may never know.

Posted on Thu, June 03, 2010 by Intern
2 Comments | Categories: Biodiversity, Farms and Farming, Food Justice, Policy,

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by intern Shauna Nep

You may already be aware that currently, over 70% of USDA’s farm payments go to the wealthiest and largest 10% of the producers of corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton and rice. The smaller farms and the growers of fruits, veggies, and livestock receive little support, if anything.

The Environmental Working Group (EWG) has been helping us understand these government payments and ensuring that their distribution to farmers is transparent by tracking where the billions in farm subsidies go and releasing this info to the public. The EWG database allows you to search for government subsidies by state, county, congressional district, farm, and also by crop.

Unfortunately, the EWG recently announced that they will not be able to update their subsidy database for 2010. This is because the data that revealed who is receiving the billions paid is no longer available. Congress was able to avoid making this data available by changing the law to say that the USDA could decide whether to release the information and the administration chose not to spend the money to do it.

Well, this is bad news. The EWG introduced this database in order to motivate the public to demand a sensible and fair Food and Farm Bill. However without the data from the USDA, the EWG will not be able to tell the public which farmers (and which crops) are receiving large payments, and which are not. This is especially important since these payments are still a large part of the reason that the food system produces more fast food than healthy food.

This just means we will have to pay extra close attention to the Food and Farm Bill happenings with the hope that we will end up with a bill which encourages government support programs that are responsible, fair, and effective.

For the full article at EWG’s site, click here.

For some other coverage:
Kansas City News
Marion Nestle of Food Politics

[photo courtesy of flickr creative commons, grantmac]


Member Comments

From Linda Degnan Cobos/Land & Sea Slow Food chapter on Fri, June 04, 2010

Thank you for this information. This kind of specific info is really helpful when we try explaining to people
how farm subsidies don’t go to ALL farmers. And it’s helpful for when we try to explain that the agricultural or farm lobby - that people say has so much power in our government -  doesn’t include small sustainable family farmers - although it helps Big Ag if people are confused on that…
Again, thanks. Good job.

From Cameron on Sat, June 05, 2010

Thanks for posting this—I’m trying to learn more about food and agriculture politics. Once again, our government and the USDA have fallen short.



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