Order Code RS22131
Updated May 9, 2008
What Is the “Farm Bill”?
Renée Johnson
Specialist in Agricultural Policy
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Summary
The farm bill, renewed about every five years, governs federal farm and food
policy. The Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002 (P.L. 107-171) is the most
recent omnibus farm bill, covering a wide range of programs including commodity price
and income support, farm credit, agricultural conservation, research, rural development,
and foreign and domestic food programs, among others. In July 2007, the House passed
its version of the new farm bill, H.R. 2419. In December 2007, the Senate passed its
version of the bill, which was offered as a substitute to H.R. 2419. Conference
negotiations were initially delayed because of differences between committee leadership
and the Administration. Consequently, Congress temporarily extended portions of the
expiring 2002 farm bill until March 15, 2008, as part of the Consolidated Appropriations
Act for FY2008 (P.L. 110-161). Since March, Congress has approved a one-month
extension, followed by three consecutive short-term extensions lasting through May 16.
On May 8, House and Senate farm bill conferees announced the details of a completed
conference agreement. The Administration announced it will veto the legislation.
What Is the “Farm Bill”?
Federal farm support, food assistance, agricultural trade, marketing, and rural
development policies are governed by a variety of separate laws. Although many of these
policies can be and sometimes are modified through freestanding authorizing legislation,
or as part of other laws, the omnibus, multi-year farm bill provides an opportunity for
policymakers to address comprehensively most of the programs of the U.S. Department
of Agriculture (USDA). The omnibus character of the bill can create a broader coalition
of support among conflicting interests for policies that, individually, might not survive
the legislative process. This same climate can stir fierce competition for available funds.
The Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002 (P.L. 107-171) is the most
recent omnibus farm bill.1 Under current law, the farm bill has ten titles that cover:
1 There have been several omnibus farm bills (2002, 1996, 1990, 1985, 1981, 1977, 1973). Major
prior agriculture legislation occurred in 1970, 1965, 1956, 1954, 1949, 1948, 1938, and 1933.

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! Title I, Commodity Programs: Income support to growers of selected
commodities, including wheat, feed grains, cotton, rice, oilseeds, peanuts,
sugar, and dairy. Support is largely through direct payments, counter-
cyclical payments, and marketing loans. Other support mechanisms are
government purchases, marketing quotas, and import barriers.
! Title II, Conservation: Environmental stewardship of farmlands and
improved management practices through land retirement and working
lands programs, among other programs geared to farmland conservation,
preservation, and resource protection.
! Title III, Agricultural Trade and Food Aid: U.S. agriculture export
and international food assistance programs, and various World Trade
Organization (WTO) obligations.
! Title IV, Nutrition: Domestic food and nutrition and commodity
distribution programs, such as food stamps and supplemental assistance.
! Title V, Farm Credit: Federal direct and guaranteed farm loan
programs. Also specifies loan eligibility rules and other policies.
! Title VI, Rural Development: Business and community programs for
planning, feasibility assessments, and coordination activities with other
local, state, and federal programs, including rural broadband access.
! Title VII, Research: Agricultural research and extension programs,
including biosecurity/response, biotechnology, and organic production.
! Title VIII, Forestry: USDA Forest Service programs, including
forestry management, enhancement, and agroforestry programs.
! Title IX, Energy: Bioenergy programs and grants for procurement of
biobased products to support development of biorefineries and assist
eligible farmers, ranchers, and rural small businesses in purchasing
renewable energy systems, as well as user education programs.
! Title X, Miscellaneous: Other types of farm programs and assistance,
including crop insurance, disaster assistance, animal welfare and
inspections, country-of-origin labeling, organic agriculture, and some
specialty commodities, among others.2
More detailed background and information on individual titles under current law is
in CRS Report RL33037, Previewing a 2007 Farm Bill.
What Is the Current Policy Setting?
Several major issues are framing the current farm bill debate. For example, are
current commodity support and risk management programs equitable across all producers
of program crops and specialty crops? Should program payments be limited per person?
Is permanent disaster assistance needed in addition to crop insurance programs? There
is general consensus to increase funding and expand current programs in the area of
conservation, forestry, bioenergy, rural development, agricultural research, farm credit,
marketing and export promotion, foreign food aid, and domestic food and nutrition. What
would be the source of funding to expand programs, given current budgetary constraints?
2 The House bill would create a new horticulture title, whereas the Senate bill would create a new
livestock title. Both the House and Senate bills also contain new bill titles with provisions that
would make certain changes to tax laws, offsetting new spending initiatives in the 2007 farm bill.

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Budgetary Considerations. As with all federal programs, the farm bill debate
has been influenced by budgetary constraints imposed by Congress. Recent federal
deficits have raised concerns with respect to reauthorization or expansion of current farm
programs. Prior to Congressional consideration of a new farm bill, budget projections
showed a lower baseline budget for agriculture programs, mainly because high
commodity prices have caused projections of future farm program spending to fall sharply
under current law projections. The Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO’s) March 2007
baseline budget has served as the official benchmark for the FY2008 budget resolution
and for scoring the budgetary impacts of the new farm bill. The CBO baseline assumes
continuation of current farm bill policies under expected economic conditions. It is the
budget resolution that set the actual spending constraints for the agriculture committees
as they drafted a new farm bill.
In May, 2007, Congress approved the FY2008 budget resolution, which adopted the
baseline budget as the fiscal parameter for the next farm bill. It also includes a $20 billion
reserve fund (above baseline) for new farm bill spending over five years.3 However, any
new spending must be deficit-neutral, meaning that it would have to be offset with
equivalent reductions in other federal spending for existing mandatory programs, or by
raising revenues. Large increases in the market prices of corn and other commodities
since the summer of 2006 have contributed to a lower March 2007 baseline for farm
program spending. The March 2007 baseline projects spending for commodity support
payments under current law to be $42.4 billion for the FY2008-FY2013 period, which is
about $30 billion lower than actual spending in the previous six years (Table 1). Baseline
estimates for mandatory conservation programs and the food stamps program for the next
six years are higher compared to the previous six years. For more information, see CRS
Report RS22694, Farm Bill Budget and Costs, 2002 vs. 2007.
Trade Negotiations and Commitments. The current debate has also been
influenced by obligations concerning the design and size of farm subsidies under the
World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement on Agriculture, as well as by the U.S.
position in the Doha Round of multilateral negotiations.
Agreement in the Doha Round was expected to converge in 2007 with the expiration
of the 2002 farm bill, and to occur well before the June 30, 2007, expiration of Trade
Promotion Authority (TPA), which provides for expedited congressional consideration
of trade agreements. Some policymakers wanted a Doha Round agreement so that the
next farm bill could be made consistent with new farm trade rules; others argued that the
United States should not unilaterally change its own subsidy programs ahead of any
multilateral trade agreement. Although progress in the Doha Round stalled in 2006,
criticisms and legal challenges by some WTO member countries of current U.S. farm
programs have continued.4 EU officials have publicly stated that the proposed changes
to U.S. domestic support programs that are being considered by Congress likely do not
go far enough in meeting Doha Round objectives for farm trade policy reform.
3 Concurrent Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2008, Deficit-Neutral Reserve Fund for
the Farm Bill
(H.Rept. 110-153, conference report, Section 307).
4 For more information, see CRS Report RL33144, WTO Doha Round: The Agricultural
Negotiations
; CRS Report RL33697, Potential Challenges to U.S. Farm Subsidies in the WTO;
and CRS Report RL33853, Canada’s WTO Case Against U.S. Agricultural Support.

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Table 1. 2002 Farm Bill Actual Spending (FY2002-FY2007 est.)
and the March 2007 CBO Baseline (FY2008-FY2013)
Commodity
Food
Conservation
Exports
Total
Support
Stamps
(outlays in $ millions)
Baseline (FY08-FY13)
42,446
26,496
2,005
225,845
296,792
Actual (FY02-FY07)
72,934
18,323
1,648
178,158
271,063
Baseline vs. Actual
-30,488
+8,173
+357
+47,687
+25,729
Source: Compiled by CRS from various Congressional Budget Office (CBO) baselines.
The Administration’s Policy Recommendations. In January 2007, the Bush
Administration released its own detailed recommendations for the farm bill that, if
enacted, could substantially alter some aspects of the current commodity support system,
while enhancing conservation, rural development, trade promotion, domestic food
assistance, farm credit, energy, and research. However, these proposed changes would
also likely face potential funding obstacles, given current budget constraints.
Nevertheless, the Administration has repeatedly said it will veto any legislation that
includes certain revenue and tax-related provisions being considered by Congress, as well
as legislation that fails to implement certain policy changes, including cuts in farm income
subsidies, among other policy issues and concerns.
The Administration’s stated approach for the farm bill is to take a “reform-minded
and fiscally responsible approach to making farm policy more equitable, predictable and
protected from challenge.”5 In part, this refers to the perceived need to more evenly
distribute federal program spending and benefits across a larger share of the U.S. farm
community, as well as the perceived need to modify current farm programs to better
comply with WTO obligations and limit future legal challenges from other countries.
Some of these same concerns have been voiced in recommendations and proposals by
other organizations and interest groups. For more information on the USDA proposal, see
CRS Report RL33916, The USDA 2007 Farm Bill Proposal: Possible Questions.
Other Recommendations/Proposals. The current farm bill debate differs from
the 2002 debate in the number and scope of proposals seeking changes to the current
legislation, some of which have gained support within and outside Congress. In addition
to the Administration proposal, several organizations and interest groups have released
their own farm bill recommendations. These include state organizations, national farm
groups, commodity associations, conservation and rural development organizations, and
several non-traditional interest groups. These policy recommendations represent diverse
interests seeking objectives ranging from maintaining current programs to substantially
altering or eliminating them. Some of these recommendations were incorporated into
legislation introduced by some Members of Congress during the debate, who sought to
directly challenge the existing farm legislation and programs through comprehensive and
broad-based proposed legislative changes. Others in Congress may be reluctant to change
current programs because they are strongly supported by the long-time beneficiaries.
5 USDA, “Johanns Unveils 2007 Farm Bill Proposals,” Release No. 0020.07, January 31, 2007,
at [http://www.usda.gov/wps/portal/usdahome].

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What Is the Status of Current Congressional Action?
Early in 2007, the chairmen of both the House and Senate Agriculture Committees
indicated their intention to complete work on a new farm bill prior to the August 2007
recess, with full congressional action by September. The House Agriculture Committee
conducted its markup of its version of the farm bill (H.R. 2419) in mid-July. House floor
action was completed on July 27, 2007. In the Senate, regional differences and budget
limitations delayed action by the Senate Agriculture Committee, which approved its
version of the farm bill (S. 2302) on October 25, 2007. On December 14, the Senate
completed floor action on its farm bill, which was offered as a substitute to the House bill.
Both the House and Senate have named conferees. Conferees began official meetings in
April 2008, and have been working to resolve approaches to finance new spending above
baseline using tax provisions not usually associated with farm bills.
Conference negotiations were initially delayed because of differences between
committee leadership and the Administration. Consequently, Congress temporarily
extended portions of the expiring 2002 farm bill until March 15, 2008, as part of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2008 (P.L. 110-161). Since March, Congress has
approved a one-month extension, followed by three consecutive short-term extensions
lasting through May 16.6 On May 8, House and Senate farm bill conferees announced the
details of a completed conference agreement. Major changes and provisions in the
conference agreement propose changes to commodity support and risk management
policies and programs (such as direct payments, payment limits, revenue and counter-
cyclical payments, crop insurance and disaster assistance, planting flexibility, and
specialty crops), and also changes to existing conservation, bioenergy, rural development,
forestry, agricultural research, competition, trade and food aid, farm credit, and domestic
food and nutrition programs. The conference agreement also contains provisions that
propose certain changes to tax laws, intended to offset new spending initiatives. The new
bill would become effective for the 2008 crop year for most of the supported farm
commodities, and for other programs for the remainder of FY2008 and beyond.
More information is available in CRS Report RL33934, Farm Bill Legislative Action
in the 110th Congress, and CRS Report RL34228, Comparison of the House and Senate
2007 Farm Bills
. See also the CRS web page “Farm Bill and Farm Policy,” which
provides links to individual CRS reports on specific issue areas and titles of the farm bill.
The Administration has announced it will veto the farm bill conference legislation
in its present form. Among the reasons cited by the Administration is the inclusion of
certain revenue and tax-related provisions in both bills. Reasons cited for this threatened
veto include concerns about the proposed tax-related changes and other budgetary issues,
concerns that the legislation does not include certain policy reforms in farm income
subsidies, and concerns about possible incompatibility with U.S. obligations under the
WTO, among other policy issues. House and Senate farm bill conferees have indicated
that they will seek to gather enough support for the conference package to override a
threatened veto. Information about what might happen if a new farm bill is not enacted
and various provisions of the 2002 farm bill expire is provided in CRS Report RL34154,
Possible Expiration of the 2002 Farm Bill.
6 March 12 (P.L. 110-196), April 17 (P.L. 110-200), April 24 (P.L. 110-205), and May 1 (P.L.
110-208).

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Table 2. 2007 Farm Bill Timeline
May 2005 — One of the first comprehensive sets of recommendations for the next farm bill is released by a major
agricultural trade association, followed by proposals by other major interest groups and non-farm organizations.
July 7, 2005 — U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) begins its series of 52 farm bill forums starting in Nashville, TN,
and covering nearly all states (excl. Louisiana and Mississippi due to Hurricane Katrina.).
February 6, 2006 — House Committee on Agriculture begins farm bill listening field hearings in Fayetteville, NC, and
other hearings to review federal farm policy.
June 23, 2006 — Senate Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee begins regional farm bill hearings in Albany, GA,
and other hearings to review federal farm policy.
January 2007 — House and Senate Agriculture Committees begin hearings on selected farm bill topics.
January 31, 2007 — USDA releases its farm bill recommendations, covering each title of the current law.
February 2007 — One of the first comprehensive bills recommending broad changes to current law is introduced in the
Senate, followed by other broad-based bill introduced by others in the House and Senate.
March 21, 2007 — Congressional Budget Office (CBO) releases its multi-year March baseline estimate of spending,
providing the starting point for the budget allocation for the new farm bill.
March 21, 2007 — House Committee on Agriculture begins subcommittee markup on individual titles of the farm bill,
proceeding through June 19, 2007.
May 17, 2007 — Congress approves the FY2008 budget resolution, adopting the baseline budget as the fiscal parameters
and including a $20 billion reserve for the new farm bill.
July 17, 2007 — House Committee on Agriculture begins full committee markup on individual titles of the farm bill (H.R.
2419), proceeding through July 19, 2007.
July 26-27, 2007 — Floor debate and passage of H.R. 2419 in the House.
October 4, 2007 — Senate Finance Committee approves a bill (S. 2242) that would create new tax credits and a disaster
trust fund for farmers, as part of the 2002 farm bill reauthorization.
October 24, 2007 — Senate Agriculture Committee begins full committee markup on individual titles of the farm bill (S.
2302), proceeding through October 25, 2007.
November 5, 2007 — Senate floor debate begins, with the Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman offering an amended
Senate bill as a substitute (S.Amdt. 3500) to H.R. 2419 (and includes provisions in S. 2242).
November 16, 2007 — Further action in the Senate is delayed when a key vote in the Senate fails to invoke cloture on the
Senate version of the farm bill.
December 14, 2007 — Floor debate and passage of the Senate farm bill, which was offered as a substitute to H.R. 2419.
December 26, 2007 — The Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2008 (P.L. 110-161) is signed into law and extends
certain expiring provisions of the 2002 farm bill until March 15, 2008.
February 4, 2008 Senate appoints conferees.
March 12, 2008 — Congress approves a one-month extension (P.L. 110-196) that lasts through April 18.
April 9, 2008 House appoints conferees.
April 17, 2008 — Congress approves a one-week extension (P.L. 110-200) that lasts through April 25.
April 24, 2008 — Congress approves a one-week extension (P.L. 110-205) that lasts through May 2.
May 1, 2008 — Congress approves a two-week extension (P.L. 110-208) that lasts through May 16.
May 8, 2008 — House and Senate farm bill conferees announce details of the completed conference agreement. The
Administration announces its intention to veto the legislation in its present form.

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