Order Code 95-129 ENR
Updated November 3, 2003
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Tobacco Price Support:
An Overview of the Program
Jasper Womach
Agricultural Policy Specialist
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Summary
About 94% of U.S. tobacco production is flue-cured and burley (both being
cigarette tobacco types). These crops are particularly important to the agriculture of
North Carolina (where flue-cured is grown) and Kentucky (where burley is grown).
Together, these two states produce 66% of the total U.S. tobacco crop. The federal
tobacco price support program is designed to support and stabilize prices for farmers.
It operates through a combination of mandatory marketing quotas and nonrecourse
loans. Marketing quotas limit the amount of tobacco each farmer can sell, which
indirectly raises market prices. The loan program establishes guaranteed minimum
prices. The law requires that the loan program operate at no net cost to the federal
government. Apart from year-to-year budget impacts, no-net-cost provisions of the law
are intended to assure that all loan principal plus interest will be recovered.1 This report
will be updated and revised as new data become available and legislative events
transpire.
Industry Profile
World production of tobacco is estimated at about 12.75 billion pounds (dry weight)
for 2003. Production data are collected for over 100 countries. However, nearly 70% of
world tobacco is produced in the following six countries: China (4,904 mil. lbs.), India
(1,312 mil. lbs.), Brazil (1,137 mil. lbs.), United States (801 mil. lbs.), Indonesia (319 mil.
lbs.), and Turkey (313 mil. lbs.).
1 Data in this report, unless otherwise specified, are U.S. Department of Agriculture data from
recent issues of Tobacco: World Markets and Trade, published by the Foreign Agriculture
Service, and Tobacco Situation and Outlook Report, published by the Economic Research
Service.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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Fewer than 90,000 U.S. farms harvested about 831 million pounds (farm weight) of
tobacco on about 414,000 acres in 2003. The estimated farm value of the 2003 crop is
about $1.6 billion. Major U.S. tobaccos are flue-cured (produced primarily in North
Carolina) and burley (produced primarily in Kentucky), which are both cigarette tobaccos.
Other types of tobacco are used for cigars, chewing, and snuff.
Tobacco is grown in 16 states; North Carolina and Kentucky originate 66% of total
production. Four other states (Tennessee, Virginia, South Carolina, and Georgia) produce
another 29%. The high per acre value of tobacco sales (averaging about $3,900 in 2003)
makes it critical to the income of the growers and important to the economies of the major
producing states. For North Carolina in 2001, tobacco constituted 9% of the value of all
farm commodities (crops and livestock); for Kentucky, tobacco accounted for 14% of the
value of all commodities.
The United States is the world’s largest exporter of manufactured tobacco products
(cigarettes) and is the second leading exporter behind Brazil of unmanufactured tobacco
leaf. During 2003, the United States is expected to exported 353 million pounds (dry
weight) of leaf tobacco, valued at $1.031 billion (mostly to the European Union, Japan,
and Switzerland). U.S. manufactured tobacco product exports could amount to about $1.8
billion (mostly to Japan, Saudi Arabia, Israel, South Korea, European Union, United Arab
Emirates, Lebanon, Hong Kong, and Singapore).
In 2003, U.S. manufacturers are expected to produce an estimated 500 billion
cigarettes (exporting about 24%). American blend cigarettes are a combination of flue-
cured, burley, and oriental tobaccos. All of the oriental tobacco is imported (from
primarily Turkey). Consumption of cigarettes has declined nearly 36% in the United
States since 1981, from 640 billion to an estimated 410 billion in 2003. However,
spending for tobacco products has increased as a result of price and tax increases. In
2002, consumers spent about $88.2 billion on tobacco products (94% for cigarettes).
Tobacco products are subject to federal excise taxes. In addition, all states and some
local governments impose excise taxes. Nationally, in 2001/02, cigarette excise taxes
averaged about 83¢ a pack on total consumption.
Excise tax collections were an
estimated $17.032 billion (federal, $8.284 billion; state, $8.548 billion; local, $200
million). On January 1, 2002, federal excise taxes increased by 5¢ per pack, to 39¢.
The Price Support Program
The tobacco price support program (first created in the 1930s along with other
commodity support programs) exists only for the economic benefit of farmers. It was
created for the purpose of supporting the income and stabilizing the price of tobacco
received by farmers. By law, the choice of whether or not federal support will be
provided is determined by growers in a referendum held every three years.
When producers approve federal price support for tobacco, they become subject to
marketing quotas. A marketing quota is a supply control mechanism that indirectly
increases market prices.
At the same time, the federal government is required to
guarantee prices at least as high as the level specified in the law.

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Legislative Authority
The first commodity price support legislation was the Agricultural Adjustment Act
of 1933. Various problems with this and subsequent legislation ultimately led to adoption
of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 (P.L. 75-430).
This permanent law
established a supply control and price support program for tobacco that, even as amended,
remains much the same today. The current legal authority and requirements for the federal
tobacco program are contained in 7 U.S.C. 1311-1316 and 7 U.S.C. 1445.
Administering Agency
Program administrative operations are carried out by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture’s (USDA) Farm Service Agency (FSA). Annual administrative costs are
estimated at about $22 million in FY2003 for tobacco price support operations. This cost
covers primarily salaries for some headquarters personnel and staff time devoted to the
tobacco program in about 600 county offices. Price support operations (nonrecourse
loans) are financed by USDA’s Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC). The CCC obtains
needed money by borrowing from the U.S. Treasury (which must be repaid with interest.
Program Operation
The federal tobacco price support program limits and stabilizes the quantity of
tobacco produced and marketed by farmers. This is achieved through marketing quotas.
In addition, minimum market prices are guaranteed to farmers through CCC nonrecourse
loans.2
Marketing Quotas. When farmers vote in favor of price supports, they are at the
same time agreeing to accept government restrictions on the amount of tobacco they can
market. The national marketing quota is the amount judged sufficient to meet domestic
and export demand, but at a price above the government support price. Each farm’s quota
is assigned to the land. So, the right to produce and market a specified quantity of tobacco
resides with the owner of the land. A farmer can only begin to grow tobacco by
purchasing or renting land that has a quota. By limiting the supply of tobacco, the market
price is increased. Total farm revenue is raised because consumption does not decline
enough to offset the price increase. In this way, farm income is supposed to be supported
through artificially high market prices, rather than through direct government payments.
This differs from other commodity support programs that utilize direct payments, rather
than marketing quotas, as the principal subsidy mechanism.
Loans. Marketing quotas are not always totally effective at supporting market
prices, given the numerous variables that affect tobacco supply and demand.
Consequently, federal support prices are guaranteed through the mechanism of
nonrecourse loans available on each farmer’s marketed crop. The loan price for each type
of tobacco is announced each year by the USDA, using the formula specified in the law
2
The term nonrecourse means that in cases of default no additional recourse is taken against
borrowers beyond taking ownership of the collateral. The collateral is accepted as full settlement
of the debt.

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to calculate loan levels. The national loan price on 2003 crop flue-cured tobacco is
$1.663 per pound; the burley loan price is $1.849.
At the auction sale barn, each lot of tobacco goes to the highest bidder, unless that
bid does not exceed the government’s loan price. In such cases, the farmer is paid the
loan price by a cooperative, with money borrowed from the CCC. The tobacco is
consigned to the cooperative (known as a price stabilization cooperative), which redries,
packs, and stores the tobacco as collateral for CCC. The cooperative, acting as an agent
for the CCC, later sells the tobacco, with the proceeds going to repay the loan plus
interest.
No-Net-Cost and Marketing Assessments. Under the threat of legislative
dissolution of the program by its opponents, Congress passed the No-Net-Cost Tobacco
Program Act in 1982 (P.L. 97-218). This legislation imposes an assessment on every
pound of tobacco marketed (including imported tobacco since 1994). The no-net-cost
assessment on 2003 crop flue-cured is 5¢ cents per pound; the burley assessment is 2¢.
Growers and buyers each pay half of the no-net-cost assessment. The no-net-cost
assessment funds are deposited in an escrow account that is held to reimburse the
government for any financial losses resulting from tobacco loan operations. Losses occur
when a cooperative sells loan collateral tobacco at a price insufficient to cover the loan
principal plus interest. Until its legal authority expired, a budget deficit reduction
assessment (called a marketing assessment)of 1% of the support price was collected on
every pound of tobacco marketed from 1990 through 1997.
Market Loss Payments and Disaster Assistance. In response to low
commodity prices in 1999, 2000, and 2001, Congress authorized market loss payments
to producers of grains, cotton, oilseeds, tobacco, dairy, and several other crops (P.L. 106-
78, P.L. 106-224, and P.L. 107-25). Tobacco growers were paid about $1 per pound for
diminished quotas, receiving direct payments of $328 in FY2000, and $350 million plus
and $129 million in FY2001. Agricultural disaster assistance legislation in 2003 (P.L.
108-7) provided another $51 million to tobacco producers. These payments are not
constrained by the no-net-cost provisions of the tobacco loan program. Additionally, $2.8
million was approved for tobacco on warehouse auction floors damaged by flooding from
hurricane Floyd in 1999.
Experience
Passage of the No-Net-Cost Tobacco Program Act made a significant change in
federal price support policy. Shifting the financial burden for tobacco program losses
from the federal government to growers encouraged a reduction in support prices (which
was done by legislation in 1985). Initially, this stopped the decline in U.S. tobacco leaf
exports. However, the growing competitiveness of foreign tobacco has continued to erode
the U.S. share of export markets. Foreign tobacco had captured 45% of the domestic
cigarette manufacturing market when Congress enacted a domestic content requirement.
This domestic content requirement took effect in 1994 and limited foreign tobacco to 25%
of the U.S. market.
Under new international trading rules, the domestic content
requirement was replaced in September 1995 with a tariff-rate quota, which is less
restrictive than the previous domestic content requirement. In 2002, imported tobacco
constituted 55.4% of U.S.-manufactured cigarettes.

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The no-net-cost rule muted much of the criticism that the tobacco loan program was
a taxpayer subsidy for tobacco farmers. The budgetary impact of the tobacco loan
program is determined primarily by loan outlays (new loans made) and loan recoveries
(repayment of old loans). In any given year, new loan outlays may be more or less than
recoveries from the repayment of old loans. In FY2002, the net loan recovery of $123
million was the result of larger old loan repayments compared to new loan outlays. Since
tobacco is typically stored for extended periods, it can be several years before the loan
inventory is sold. The law requires that any losses of loan principal and interest be repaid
from the no-net-cost account, which is funded from assessments on growers and buyers
of leaf tobacco. This requirement does not apply to 1999 crop loan inventories that
Congress authorized be transferred to the CCC without the action being charged against
the no-net-cost program (P.L. 106-387, Sec. 844). This law likely will cost the CCC over
$660 million. In the absence of this law, losses from the disposal of these inventories
would have been covered by the no-net-cost account with funds raised from assessments
on tobacco marketings.
Table 1. CCC Tobacco Support Outlays and Recoveries, FY2000-
FY2003
Million $
Loan Program Operation
FY01
FY02
FY03
FY04
Actual
Actual
Estimate
Estimate
Loan outlays(+)
115
110
147
86
Loan recoveries(-)
-263
-233
-87
-208
Net loan outlays(+) or recoveries(-)
-148
-123
60
-122
Market loss payments & disaster assistance(+)
471
6
51
0
Miscellaneous expenses(+) or receipts (-)
63
-20
3
0
Total net expenditures(+) or receipts(-)
386
-137
114
-122
Source: Data are compiled from U.S. Department of Agriculture, Commodity Credit Corporation.
Commodity Estimates Book, FY 2004 Mid Session Review. Washington, DC July 15, 2003. p.235.
There are other critics of the tobacco program. Free market advocates point to the
competitive disadvantages caused by the program. Economists believe that without
marketing quotas and price support loans, farmers would produce more tobacco, which
would be sold at lower prices. The lower prices would lead to increased exports, and
more domestic production would be used in U.S.-manufactured cigarettes — displacing
some of the imported tobacco. Some health advocates say the federal government should
not be supporting tobacco farm income and should get out of the tobacco business.
However, elimination of the program would free producers from the production
constraints of marketing quotas and result in more and lower-priced tobacco.
Elimination of the tobacco program would likely cause consolidation into fewer but
larger, more mechanized tobacco farms, with reduced costs of production. Many of the
smaller, higher cost farms would likely stop producing tobacco, but they would have very
few alternative crops capable of such high per-acre revenues as tobacco. Economists
predict that there would be a substantial adjustment cost from elimination of the program,

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and it would not fall solely upon those farmers, workers, and communities that would
benefit from the free market efficiency gains. Several tobacco “quota buyout” bills have
been introduced that would substantially alter or possibly federal tobacco support policy.
Other USDA Tobacco-Related Activities
In addition to the tobacco price support program, the USDA administers several
other programs designed to assist tobacco farmers, facilitate marketing, and provide
information to federal program managers and policy makers. It administers subsidized
multi-peril crop insurance for tobacco (as well as for other crops), which is budgeted to
cost about $39 million in FY2003. Also, as with other crops, the Department collects,
analyzes, and disseminates data on tobacco production, utilization, and prices, costing
about $1.347 million in FY2003. The USDA, using its own discretion, has discontinued
all federal extension program expenditures on education and pest management related to
tobacco. The Department is specifically prohibited from spending research funds on the
production, processing or marketing of tobacco, and from promoting the export of tobacco
or tobacco products. These prohibitions are contained in the annual USDA appropriation
law.
For More Information
! USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA) each year issues Commodity Fact
Sheets [http://www.fsa.usda.gov/pas/publications/facts/pubfacts.htm] on
the tobacco price support programs (as well as other commodity
programs), which include eligibility information, program details, and
historical data.
! The Tobacco Situation and Outlook Report, published by USDA’s
Economic Research Service (ERS), is a periodic compendium of
production, trade, demand, and other current and historical data, plus
special analytical articles. See the electronic Tobacco Briefing Room
[http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/tobacco/]for an array of information.
! A survey and budget summary is available in CRS Report 97-417,
Tobacco Related Programs and Activities of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture: Operation and Cost
.
!
CRS Report RL 31790, Tobacco Quota Buyout Proposals in the 108th
Congress, examines the issues surrounding quota buyout proposals.