Eakinomics: Federal
Aid and the Farm Sector
A bit over a year ago, Eakinomics checked in
on the financial status of the farm sector. The trade/tariff war with China
had added to the woes of a sector that had already been slumping since 2012.
Federal direct payments (which omit federal support of loans and other
financial arrangements) had reached 11 percent of farm net income in 2017,
but the Trump Administration bailout of farmers in the aftermath of the trade
war promised to essentially double
this amount.
As witnessed by recent New
York Times coverage,
the issue of large federal subsidies to the farm sector, especially on the
eve of the election, continues to command attention. The table updates the
farm sector financial picture using data from the United States Department of
Agriculture. As before, the most important feature is that farm income
in 2019 appears to have rebounded from the recent low in 2016. Of the $7.5
billion increase in net income in 2019, however, fully $5.6 billion was due
to increased federal aid. Otherwise, receipts declined modestly.
The data also reveal that crops continue to generate 52.5 percent of farm
revenue. The mix of crop revenue versus animals, poultry and eggs, dairy
products, and miscellaneous other sales
remains relatively stable. But the biggest recent increase has been direct
payments from the federal government, which are up over 72 percent from 2016.
These now constitute over 20 percent of net income.
The trade war and now pandemic have taken a real toll on an
already-weakened farm economy. As a result, as the election approaches, the
sector is more reliant on federal aid than in the recent past.
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