Staff Contributors
Guest Contributors

The farm bill: what went wrong

Michael Pollan calls for crafting a viable alternative for next time

Posted by Guest author (Guest Contributor) at 1:30 PM on 04 Jun 2008

Read more about: agriculture | ag policy | legislation | food

This is a guest post by Michael Pollan, author of In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto and The Omnivore's Dilemma.

-----

Michael Pollan
Michael Pollan.

After many, many months of wrangling, Congress recently passed a farm bill, overriding a veto by the president. In my view, it is not a very good bill -- it preserves more or less intact the whole structure of subsidies responsible for so much that is wrong in the American food system.

On the other hand, it does contain some significant new provisions that, with luck, will advance the growing movement toward a more just, sustainable, and healthy food system.

You might rightly ask why there was so little movement on commodity subsidies, in a year when crop prices are at record highs and public scrutiny of the subsidy system has been intense. Indeed, the people on the Hill I talk to tell me they have not seen so much political activism around the farm bill in a generation. All the calls, cards, and emails sent by ordinary eaters clearly made a difference.

So why so little change on the key issue? Why didn't we get a food bill, rather than another farm bill? Here's what I think happened.

Critics of farm-policy-as-usual -- and I count myself among them -- did a much better job of demonizing subsidies than they did proposing alternative forms of farm support that would have won over some percentage of the farmers now receiving subsidies.

The whole discourse depicting subsidies as a form of welfare -- payments to celebrities, rich people in cities, mega-farms, etc. -- convinced many farmers that the ultimate goal of the farm bill's critics was to abolish subsidies, rather than to develop a new set of incentives that would encourage farmers to grow real food and take good care of their land.

Had the reformers crafted proposals that were easy to explain and attractive to even just a segment of commodity-crop farmers, we could have made much more progress. Instead, faced with what appeared like a threat to their livelihood, the old guard hunkered down and defended the status quo, refusing even to negotiate on the central issues.

Better alternatives could have split this block, and it was our failing not to devise and promote them. What the Old Guard did instead of negotiating a new system of farm support was what it has always done: pick off the opposition, faction by faction, by offering money for pet programs. The history of the farm bill has long been about such trade-offs: Urban legislators support subsidies in exchange for rural support for food stamps.

That Grand Bargain has now been extended to supporters of organic agriculture, local food systems, school lunch advocates, etc. The reason that, in the end, most of the activist groups wound up urging Congress to override the veto is that, by the end, they all had been given something they liked in the bill.

You could put it more baldly and suggest they'd all been bought off -- that the $300-plus billion bill represents the exact price of buying off all the critics of the farm bill, plus the cost of maintaining the status quo. But this is how the game is played, and the fact is, some good will come of these programs, modest as they are -- they will sow seeds of change and legitimize alternative food chains, or so we can hope.

(For a summary of what's in the bill, for better or worse, see this post by farmer-activist Debra Eschmeyer.)

The challenge for the next farm bill is clear: It's not enough to engage the public, important as that is; we also have to get much smarter about both policy and politics, and craft some attractive proposals that will divide the farm block as well as move us to a healthier and more sustainable food system -- economically sustainable for farmers and farm workers and environmentally sustainable.

This is the project for the next few years. We've got our work cut out for us.

one big reason we got a half baked farm bill

is the Dems led by Nancy Pelosi - completely sold themselves out to big ag interests.

it was a colossal embarrassment that GW was for once on the right side of the issue while the Democrats looked like morons

Works both ways...

Some of us tried. There was one vocal advocate working for a progressive farm group who was utterly unpleasant, tearing up eager politicians on blogs across cyberspace and spitting venom at others (including here at Grist) telling them basically they were too stupid to understand; giving off the superiority air that she was doing us all a huge favor directing her abusive vicious dominance upon us. Ran off a lot of sympathetic supporters with her unnecessary vitriol. She might have had some knowledge (who knows? few could stand to deal with her) but she did herself, her group, and ultimately people all over the world no favors.

I'm all for hearing ideas. I certainly have a few myself and understand so much more now than I did a year ago (thank you Michael, Tom, and Grist, as well as Dan, Curt, Ian and the many behind the scenes). Hoping to be able to get some time with my congressional members to get a better handle for the next round and to make sure the unfunded mandates (trade-offs as they may be) get advocated for each budget cycle.

So far I'm leaning for price supports, re-establishment of solid reserves, and some sort of limits on the amounts of each commodity grown each year with encouragements to alternatives as well as a number of other reforms. Don't imagine the big players who really benefit currently will be all that keen on those possibilities though. What can I say? I don't think the government was meant to be of the corporations, by the corporations and for the corporations.

All in favor of losing your rights, please do nothing

Why not keep subsidies an issue for the states?

Mr Pollan,

Big fan of your work, and I think on nearly every issue you covered in Omnivore's Dilemma, you were spot on. Except, that is, for your view, elaborated above, regarding the Farm Bill and subsidies in general.

A government large enough to correct the subsidies allocations in whatever way you find appealing is a government large enough to take all that away and revert to some system as wrongheaded as the current one, or perhaps worse. There is a lobbyist problem in D.C. precisely because the federal government is so large. The solution is to remove the incentive for lobbyists to pollute DC in the first place, by removing their reason for lobbying the federal gov't.

I see your points, from your book, that certain subsidies to farmers are a good idea, given that free market principles don't apply very cleanly, given unpredictability of weather.

But why not eliminate all federal subsidies for agriculture, and instead have those states that have a large enough agricultural sector dole out subsidies as needed to farmers in their state? This would keep the relevant decision-making closer to the areas impacted than is currently. Meaning farmers would have more actual involvement in policy making. Wouldn't states with large enough agricultural production see it in their own best interest to have farmers supported, for their state's economy? I don't see why they wouldn't.

And wouldn't a state-level solution keep farmers happy, who were worried that subsidies would have been removed altogether by reform, as you suggest in this article?

kind regards,
Matthew Dallman

Like your thinking Matthew

I live in Montana and while working on posting property taxes in for our county, I noticed that some "celebrities" with farms taxes were a fraction of what regular hard-working Montanans were having to pay. When I asked about it, I was told that it doesn't matter how much property a celebrity or landowner owns (this can be thousands and even millions of acres), if they can find someone to farm just 40 acres of it, they get a really great break on their property taxes. I don't know about you, but that sounds like a whole lot of cheating to me!

As far as allowing the state's to regulate subsidies, it should be required that the farmer be a resident of the state they are getting the subsidy in. If they had this requirement in the farm bill right now, it would eliminate all of this cheating that is happening.

"For as long as space endures, and for as long as living beings remain, until then may I too abide, to dispel the misery of the world." - Shantideva

You are not logged in. Thus, you cannot post a comment. If you have an account, log in. If you don't have an account, well, by all means go make one! Meet you back here in five.
sign in
Search Gristmill
Subscribe
  • subscribe via RSSStay updated with the Gristmill RSS feed.
  • Add to My Yahoo!
  • Subscribe with Bloglines
  • Subscribe in NewsGator Online
  • Subscribe in Netvibes
  • Subscribe in Google
Using Gristmill
  • What is Gristmill?
  • Posting rules
The comments of Gristmill users reflect the opinions of those individuals only, and do not necessarily reflect the viewpoints of Grist, its staff, its board members, their psychotherapists, or their aestheticians. Got it?

Gristmill is powered by Scoop.

ADVERTISING POLICY


About Grist | Support Grist | Job Board | Archives | Grist by Email | RSS | Podcast
Gristmill Blog | In the News | Ask Umbra | Muckraker | Victual Reality | 'Tis the Season | The Grist List | The Bottom Line



Grist: Environmental News and Commentary
a beacon in the smog (tm) ©2009. Grist Magazine, Inc. All rights reserved. Gloom and doom with a sense of humor®.
Webmaster | Sitemap | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Trademarks