This paper addresses the potential of the Environmental Quality Incentives Program to become the first true green payment program, one which is not directly linked to farm income goals as all conservation programs have been in the past, even in contrast to the Conservation Reserve Program and the now obsolete Agricultural Conservation Program. EQIP is thus discussed as a new generation of conservation programs which are General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade-legal (no payments to farmers which may influence trade) and more targeted to actual agro-environmental problems than the traditional conservation programs. In the next sections, the paper raises two important questions: First, to what extent should green payments substitute for tradi...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are a...
We develop a watershed-based model of green payments to examine how payments applied to different en...
A concern with productivity has to be tempered with our history of declining real prices for agricul...
This paper addresses the potential of the Environmental Quality Incentives Program to become the fir...
There is growing interest in green payments subsidizing conservation measures on working farmland ba...
This paper analyzes the efficient design of green payments. Green payments can generate environmenta...
As Congress develops new farm legislation, some are lobbying for a new partnership between U.S. taxp...
The Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) provides farmers with financial and technical as...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are a...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, have ...
The purpose of this brief analysis is to consider the potential points of contact between a program...
This paper focuses on the compatibility of U.S. agri-environmental programs with the Green Box provi...
This study investigates the environmental impacts of several forms of policies that offer farmers su...
Voluntary incentive payments, also known green subsidies are a popular method to incentivize farmers...
This report presents an overview of the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), a voluntary...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are a...
We develop a watershed-based model of green payments to examine how payments applied to different en...
A concern with productivity has to be tempered with our history of declining real prices for agricul...
This paper addresses the potential of the Environmental Quality Incentives Program to become the fir...
There is growing interest in green payments subsidizing conservation measures on working farmland ba...
This paper analyzes the efficient design of green payments. Green payments can generate environmenta...
As Congress develops new farm legislation, some are lobbying for a new partnership between U.S. taxp...
The Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) provides farmers with financial and technical as...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are a...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, have ...
The purpose of this brief analysis is to consider the potential points of contact between a program...
This paper focuses on the compatibility of U.S. agri-environmental programs with the Green Box provi...
This study investigates the environmental impacts of several forms of policies that offer farmers su...
Voluntary incentive payments, also known green subsidies are a popular method to incentivize farmers...
This report presents an overview of the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), a voluntary...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are a...
We develop a watershed-based model of green payments to examine how payments applied to different en...
A concern with productivity has to be tempered with our history of declining real prices for agricul...