1 / 10

Federal Farm Policy and Domestic Policy Support for Mediterranean Products

Cal-Med Consortium Workshop II December 7-8 Washington D.C. Federal Farm Policy and Domestic Policy Support for Mediterranean Products. Jay E. Noel Director, California Institute for the Study of Specialty Crops California Polytechnic State University. Production Location.

Télécharger la présentation

Federal Farm Policy and Domestic Policy Support for Mediterranean Products

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cal-Med Consortium Workshop II December 7-8 Washington D.C. Federal Farm Policy and Domestic Policy Support for Mediterranean Products Jay E. Noel Director, California Institute for the Study of Specialty Crops California Polytechnic State University

  2. Production Location

  3. Acreage and Value of Production2005

  4. Federal Farm Policy Support of U.S. Mediterranean Crops • Assistance for Losses • Crop Insurance: 44 crops covered; Crop insurance subsidy $424 million • Market Loss Payments: Ad Hoc payments. Examples include Apples $269 million in 1999 and 2000; Pecans $8.5 million 2005; cumulative total of ~$20 billion since 1988

  5. Marketing • Marketing Orders and Agreements • Generic Promotion, Research and Information Programs (Check-off Programs) A number of studies have shown positive cost/benefit returns to marketing order and check-off programs- Examples include Williams (benefit-cost ranges of 12 to 27 for differing crop and marketing order activities); Carman (Avocado producers gained an additional $70.4 million in revenues for $7.86 promotional spending) Williams, Gary. “FAIR Reviews and Economic Returns Analyses as Strategic Marketing/Management Tools”, 2004 Marketing Order Management Conference, San Antonio, Texas, September 29, 2004. Carman, Hoy F. “Offsetting Price Impacts from Imports with Generic Advertising and Promotion Programs: The Hass Avocado Promotion and Research Order”, Review of Agricultural Economics, Vol. 28, No. 4, 2006. see also Carman, Hoy F. and R. Kim Craft. “An Economic Evaluation of California Avocado Industry Marketing Programs, 1956 – 1995”, NICPRE Quarterly, Vol. 4. No. 3, 1998.

  6. Marketing • Export Promotion- Market Access Promotional Program $138.5 million allocated by USDA, Foreign Agricultural Service in 2005 to promote Mediterranean type crops. • Food Purchases USDA, Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) domestic purchases of fruits and vegetables were $445.8 million in 2004 and $375 million in 2005.

  7. Marketing • Food Assistance and Nutrition • National Research • USDA, Agricultural Research Service (ARS) allocated ~$160.4 million or 33.7% of its FY 2005 $476.1 million budget to fruits, nuts and vegetable research. • USDA, Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension (CSREES) FY Budget invested approximately $79.6 million to support research, extension and education focused on fruits, nuts, and vegetables representing about 7.2% of a total budget of $1.1 billion. • USDA, Economic Research Service (ERS) in FY 2005 budgeted $542,000 to staff and overhead costs for specialty crops research and $165,800 to cooperative research agreements with external collaborators representing ~ 1% of its $74 million.

  8. Other Federal Support • Mediterranean Products Planting Restrictions • USDA, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) Difficult to isolate APHIS budgetary outlays that address pest and disease activities that relate specifically to Mediterranean products. There is annual appropriation of $60 million for the fruit fly exclusion and detection program and $18 million is budgeted for trade issues management and resolution. The total FY 2006 budget for APHIS activities is $306 million.

  9. Other Federal Support • Specialty Crop Block Grants to the States The Emergency Agricultural Assistance Act (EAAC) of 2001 provided states with block grants to promote specialty crops. provided almost $160 million to all 50 states and Puerto Rico. Specialty Crop Competitiveness Act (SCCA) of 2004 (PL 108-465). The SCCA block grants are to support programs in research, marketing, education, pest and disease management, production, and food safety. The initial legislation (HR 3242) called for a mandatory annual appropriation of $470 million in mandatory funds from the Commodity Credit Fund to support the block grant program. The final bill authorized the program subject to annual appropriations, and limited funding to $44.5 million per year ($7 million was appropriated in FY 2006).

  10. The 2007 Farm Bill and Mediterranean Products • HR 6193 “Equitable Agriculture Today for a Healthy America Act” or the “Eat Healthy America Act” • Objective: permanently incorporating specific specialty crop programs into federal farm legislation. • Support: Over 70 U.S. specialty crop organizations representing producers of fresh fruit, dried fruit, tree nuts, and other specialty crops. • The Bill contains eight titles that provide for government support for specialty crop block grants, disaster assistance, conservation, international trade, pest and disease control, nutrition, research and development, renewable energy, and miscellaneous issues

More Related