Opinion: Farm policy is essential to maintaining ag production in the U.S.
By: Lorraine Greco
If there is one place that, in recent years, overwhelmingly
demonstrates the need and importance of U.S. farm policy, it is California. For
the past four years, this top agricultural producing state has experienced
record drought conditions and for farmers like my husband and me, it has taken
a toll on our operation.
We have been growing rice in the Sacramento Valley for 30
years and we have never seen a weather event this relentless. Although the
arrival of El Nino has provided much needed rain, the effects are marginal
because of the intensity of the drought.
Operating loans are essential for every farmer because of
the cost of producing crops, but for my family they have enabled us to keep
going to the next year despite depressed yields and prices, and in some cases
the inability to plant a crop at all.
We would not be able to receive this crucial financing
without crop insurance and farm policy in place. Farming is an inherently risky
business and bankers want assurances that we will be able to pay back the loan
if disaster strikes. We were not born into farming – we built our operation
from the ground up – so we still have land and equipment payments to make
regardless of whether we have a good or bad growing season, or whether a
natural disaster wipes out our crops altogether. Crop insurance is something we
purchase each year to manage this risk and we only receive an indemnity when we
suffer a verifiable loss. Even then, it doesn’t make us whole, but it does
soften the blow from a bad year.
It’s important to have this kind of safety net in place for
all farmers, all across the country. And, I am always alarmed by the calls in
Washington to cut what remains of the farm safety net, especially from those
who have no idea what it takes to grow food and fiber. We need risk management
tools now more than ever to help us overcome unpredictable weather events.
Additionally, we need policy in place to combat unfair
practices with our foreign competitors like China and Thailand whose support
for their rice growers far exceeds that of the United States and actually
violates agreements under the World Trade Organization (WTO). While the U.S.
was reforming its policy in the 2014 Farm Bill, other countries were ramping up
support for their farmers, in some cases by more than a 100 percent. Their
policies are trade distorting and leave American growers at a competitive
disadvantage.
American farmers can and do manage extraordinary risks, year
in and year out, but we cannot manage the challenges associated with
unpredictable and sustained natural disasters, volatile markets, and trade
distorting policies of our foreign counterparts without risk management tools
like crop insurance and farm policy.
Lawmakers in Washington should consider this reality. If they
want to continue to have agricultural production in this country, and in
California in particular, they need to invest in it.
Lorraine Greco serves on the California Board for the U.S.
Rice Producers Association. She grows organic rice with her husband in northern
California.
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