Nov 23, 2011
Supercommittee’s failure ends effort to cut farm spending

The failure of the congressional supercommittee charged with cutting the U.S. federal budget deficit scuttles a plan by the House and Senate agriculture committees to cut $23 billion in spending, panel leaders said.

The supercommittee’s “failure to reach a deal on an overall deficit-reduction package effectively ends this effort,” House Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas, an Oklahoma Republican, and Senate Agriculture Committee Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow, a Michigan Democrat, said today in an e-mail.

The plan, which was never publicly released, would have done away with about $5 billion in annual payments to farmers made regardless of crop prices. The subsidy would have been replaced partially with insurance against “shallow losses” created by drops in revenue, according to lawmakers including Representative Ron Kind, a Wisconsin Democrat.

Agricultural subsidies estimated at $10.2 billion stood out as a target for budget cutters after the USDA forecast record farm profits this year of $103.6 billion.

Lucas and Stabenow said their committees will now focus on crafting the next farm bill, due next year. Bloomberg Business Week

Read more of the story here.




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