News
and Events
College
of Agricultural and Life Sciences
University
of Wisconsin-Madison
http://news.cals.wisc.edu - news@cals.wisc.edu - (608) 262-3172
5/7/10
For
more information: Scott Brown, (573) 882-3861, brownsc@missouri.edu,
or Ed Jesse, (608) 262-6348. evjesse@wisc.edu
REPORTS
BY WISCONSIN AND MISSOURI DAIRY POLICY EXPERTS PROVIDE BACKGROUND FOR FARM BILL
DEBATE
Like
a lot of strong medicine, past federal dairy programs have cured some industry
ills but caused some unpleasant side effects.
A
group of dairy policy specialists from Missouri and Wisconsin want the industry
to remember that as debate ramps up on dairy provisions for the 2012 Farm Bill.
So they have produced a pair of reports, one an overview, the other in-depth, on
the benefits and unintended consequences of past dairy policies.
“These
reports are like the slip of paper that comes with a prescription drug,” says
Scott Brown, a dairy economist at the University of Missouri. “We list some of
the side effects.”
The
reports are the product of the Dairy Policy Analysis Alliance, a partnership
between the University of Missouri’s Food and Agricultural Policy Research
Institute (FAPRI) and the University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of
Agricultural and Applied Economics. Co-authors include Brown and UW-Madison
agricultural economists Bob Cropp, Brian Gould and Ed Jesse.
The
reports focus on what’s been tried in the past, rather than delving into
current policy proposals. Recent decades provide plenty of lessons about the
strengths and weaknesses of various policy strategies, Brown notes.
“Dairy
herd owners liked the whole-herd buyout program used in the 1980s to reduce milk
supplies and raise milk prices. Beef producers didn’t like all of those cows
added to the meat supply,” he says.
“Likewise,
producers liked price supports, but if the price is set too high, the U.S. can
collect surplus dairy products from around the world. Taxpayers didn’t like
owning warehouses full of cheese, butter and nonfat dry milk in the 1980s.”
One
of the reports, Dairy Policy Briefs, provides one-page descriptions of 11 key
concepts: volatility, price supports, income loss, supply management, revenue
insurance, trade, milk marketing orders, classifications, pricing and pooling.
The other report, a 54-pager titled Dairy Policy Issues for the 2012 Farm Bill,
goes beyond the basics.
The
reports came out just in time. Rep. Collin Peterson (D-Minn), chair of the House
Agricultural Committee, has already announced a series of hearings on the next
Farm Bill and has called on commodity groups to join in the discussion.
Legislators
have their work cut out. Producers are very concerned about price volatility
(since the last Farm Bill was passed, the industry has seen some of its best and
worst markets in the past half-century). But Congress is under tremendous
pressure to limit spending.
“We’ve
tried supply management and direct payments. All of these programs had costs,”
Brown points out.
The
dairy policy reports can be downloaded at www.fapri.missouri.edu
or http://future.aae.wisc.edu/alliance_index.html.
A limited number of printed copies are available by contacting Scott Brown (brownsc@missouri.edu
) or Ed Jesse (evjesse@wisc.edu).
###