The federal government currently runs two major price support programs in agriculture, the marketing loan and countercyclical payment (CCP) programs. While these programs are both targeted at providing producer price protection, they have different political and financial costs associated with them. We outline these costs and project the effects of various loan rate changes on these programs for eight crops (barley, corn, cotton, oats, rice, sorghum, soybeans, and wheat) for 2005. Loan rate changes affect the price support programs by changing the payment rate producers receive when payments are triggered. We find that the crop's relative price strength versus its loan rate and the relationship between CCP base production and 2005 expected ...
This paper develops a stochastic model for comparing payments to U.S. corn producers under the U.S. ...
3 pp.This publication examines the way the 2008 Farm Bill and the uncertain credit market may affect...
advances in information technologies are reducing information asymmetries in credit markets and henc...
The federal government currently runs two major price support programs in agriculture, the marketing...
The federal government currently runs two major price support programs in agriculture, the marketing...
Low market prices for corn and soybeans have triggered two federal price support programs
Over the next several years, crop prices are projected to be below to slightly above commodity loan ...
Beginning in the fall of 1998 low corn and soybean prices triggered a government price support mecha...
The 1985 Food Security Act is designed to make agricultural com-modities more competitive in the wor...
This report discusses recently approved legislation reauthorizing major farm income and commodity ...
Marketing assistance loans for the major crops were designed to facilitate orderly marketing by prov...
Demand is growing for counter-cyclical farm program payments. One proposal, Supplemental Income Paym...
Past research on agricultural loan pricing is not extensive and has been hampered by a lack of suita...
The Average Crop Revenue Election (ACRE) program is a new, optional safety net for farmers provided ...
3 pp., 1 table, 5 graphsA cost-price squeeze is a situation in which the ratio of prices received to...
This paper develops a stochastic model for comparing payments to U.S. corn producers under the U.S. ...
3 pp.This publication examines the way the 2008 Farm Bill and the uncertain credit market may affect...
advances in information technologies are reducing information asymmetries in credit markets and henc...
The federal government currently runs two major price support programs in agriculture, the marketing...
The federal government currently runs two major price support programs in agriculture, the marketing...
Low market prices for corn and soybeans have triggered two federal price support programs
Over the next several years, crop prices are projected to be below to slightly above commodity loan ...
Beginning in the fall of 1998 low corn and soybean prices triggered a government price support mecha...
The 1985 Food Security Act is designed to make agricultural com-modities more competitive in the wor...
This report discusses recently approved legislation reauthorizing major farm income and commodity ...
Marketing assistance loans for the major crops were designed to facilitate orderly marketing by prov...
Demand is growing for counter-cyclical farm program payments. One proposal, Supplemental Income Paym...
Past research on agricultural loan pricing is not extensive and has been hampered by a lack of suita...
The Average Crop Revenue Election (ACRE) program is a new, optional safety net for farmers provided ...
3 pp., 1 table, 5 graphsA cost-price squeeze is a situation in which the ratio of prices received to...
This paper develops a stochastic model for comparing payments to U.S. corn producers under the U.S. ...
3 pp.This publication examines the way the 2008 Farm Bill and the uncertain credit market may affect...
advances in information technologies are reducing information asymmetries in credit markets and henc...