U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program 
October 5, 2020 
Outlays, 2014-2020 
Randy  Schnepf 
Provisions of Title I of the 2018 farm bill (Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018; P.L. 115-334) 
Specialist in Agricultural 
authorize a set of revenue support programs for major program crops  for crop years 2019-2023 as 
Policy 
part of the so-called farm safety net. This includes three principal revenue support programs—
  
Marketing Assistance Loan (MAL), Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC), and Price Loss Coverage 
(PLC).  Participation in these revenue support programs is free. However, individuals must sign 
 
up their base acres for ARC and PLC and comply with certain requirements to be eligible for 
payments. 
Under the MAL, PLC, and ARC programs, most grain, oilseed, and pulse crop producers in the United States are eligible for 
two tiers of revenue support. The first tier of support is provided by the MAL program in the form of a price floor and interim 
financing—a nonrecourse, nine-month loan at statutory loan rates for harvested production of eligible crops (referred to as 
loan crops). The MAL program may be supplemented by a higher, second tier of revenue support comprised of either (1) the 
PLC program, which provides price protection at the national level via statutorily fixed “reference” prices for eligible crops, 
or (2) the ARC program, which provides revenue protection via historical moving average revenue guarantees at the county 
or whole-farm levels. 
The ARC and PLC programs were first authorized under the 2014 farm bill (Agricultural Act of 2014; P.L. 113-79) for the 
crop years 2014-2018. At the start of the 2014 farm bill, participating producers were offered a one-time opportunity to enrol  
their historical program acres  (referred to as “base” acres), on a crop-by-crop basis, for either ARC or PLC. Under the 2014 
enrollment, 76% of base acres—including 93% of corn, 97% of soybeans, and 58% of wheat—signed up for the county-level 
ARC program. The high ARC sign-up for these crops was due to record or near-record farm prices during the 2010-2013 
period. These historically high prices factored into the ARC revenue guarantee formula and assured producers of receiving 
payments during 2014-2016. However, in recent years, market conditions have turned in favor of PLC. The 2018 farm bill’s 
first sign-up (for the crop years 2019 and 2020) allowed producers to reallocate base acres between ARC and PLC. Under 
this new enrollment, producers overwhelmingly shifted away from ARC and to PLC for all crops, as 70% of total enrolled 
base acres elected to participate in the PLC program. 
Payments under the MAL, ARC, and PLC programs vary countercyclically with market conditions—that is, payments tend to 
increase when farm prices fall below support levels and decline when farm prices rise above support levels. Such a price-
contingent approach has long been part of U.S. farm policy, using programs with different names but related attributes. Since 
2010, farm prices for most program crops have risen substantially above their statutorily fixed MAL loan rates , and the MAL 
program has diminished in effectiveness as a floor price, particularly for corn and soybean producers. Total MAL program 
outlays averaged $205 million per year during the five-year period (2014-2018) of the 2014 farm bill. In contrast, combined 
payments under ARC and PLC averaged $5.2 billion per year during the same five-year period. This included substantial 
combined payments during the first three years of the 2014 farm bill period—$5.3 billion in 2014, $7.9 billion in 2015, and 
$7.0 billion in 2016—driven largely by strong ARC payments. By 2017, farm prices for most program crops had fallen below 
their respective reference prices, and PLC payments had risen in importance relative to ARC. ARC and PLC payments fell to 
$3.1 billion and $2.6 billion, respectively, in 2017 and 2018. Under the 2018 farm bill sign-up, producers shifted enrollment 
of their eligible base acres away from ARC and to PLC. This enrollment shift, coupled with projections (U.S. Department of 
Agriculture [USDA], February 2020) of weak farm prices for most program crops over the 2019-2023 period, suggest that 
USDA will  make substantially larger PLC payments than ARC payments under the 2018 farm bill. 
ARC and PLC implementation and operational issues of potential interest to Congress include the delayed payment schedule 
under both programs—payments do not occur until at least a year after the enrolled crop is harvested. Congress may also 
want to consider potential inequities among program crops related to statutory reference prices relative to market conditions, 
as some crops have received larger per-acre program payments with greater frequency than others. Finally, another potential 
issue is the extent to which the general level of farm prices has moved above MAL loan rates, thus diminishing their 
functionality as floor prices for eligible crops. 
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Contents 
Introduction ................................................................................................................... 1 
Two Tiers of Revenue Support .......................................................................................... 1 
ARC and PLC Enrollment Under the 2014 and 2018 Farm Bills  ....................................... 5 
Participation Shifts from ARC to PLC Under 2018 Farm Bill ........................................... 6 
Program Outlays Reflect Market Conditions ....................................................................... 9 
MAL Program Support Levels Are Low Relative to Farm Prices....................................... 9 
ARC and PLC Outlays Large in 2014-2016, Declined in 2017-2018 ................................ 11 
Comparison Between ARC and PLC Outlays by Commodity .................................... 12 
Comparison of ARC and PLC Outlays per Base Acre............................................... 12 
ARC and PLC Have a Delayed Payments Structure ................................................. 14 
Issues for Congress ....................................................................................................... 17 
 
Figures 
Figure 1. Price Loss Coverage (PLC) Payment Formula ........................................................ 2 
Figure 2. PLC Low-Price Scenario for Rice......................................................................... 2 
Figure 3. County-Level Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC) Payment Formula.......................... 3 
Figure 4. ARC Low-Revenue Scenario for Corn .................................................................. 3 
Figure 5. Base Acres Enrolled Under 2014 and 2018 Farm Bills ............................................. 5 
Figure 6. Enrollment of Base Acres by Program: PLC, ARC, and ARC-IC ............................... 7 
Figure 7. PLC Participation Rate: 2014 Versus 2018 Farm Bills ............................................. 7 
Figure 8. MYAP as % of Reference Price for Corn, Soybeans, and Wheat Since 2005................ 8 
Figure 9. Monthly Farm Prices as % of MAL Loan Rate Since 1990 ..................................... 10 
Figure 10. MAL, PLC, and ARC Program Outlays, 2014-2023F........................................... 11 
Figure 11. Combined ARC and PLC Outlays by Commodity, 2014-2018 ............................... 12 
Figure 12. Average Annual ARC and PLC Payment Rates per Base Acre ............................... 13 
Figure 13. Schedule for 2020 Corn ARC and PLC Payments ............................................... 14 
Figure 14. ARC and PLC Payments by Crop Year, Calendar Year, and Fiscal Year  .................. 16 
 
Tables 
Table 1. Marketing Year and Payment Date for Major Covered Crops, 2020 Crop Year ............ 15 
Table 2. Farm Prices, MAL Loan Rates, and Effective Reference Prices ................................ 19 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ....................................................................................................... 20 
 
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Introduction 
Provisions of Title I of the 2018 farm bil  (Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018; P.L. 115-334) 
authorize a set of revenue support programs for eligible crops for crop years 2019-2023 as part of 
the so-cal ed farm safety net. This includes three revenue support programs—Marketing 
Assistance Loan (MAL), Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC), and Price Loss Coverage (PLC)—
that are available  for most grain, oilseed, and pulse crops in the United States.1 Participation in 
these revenue support programs is free. However, individuals must sign up their base acres for 
ARC and PLC and comply with certain requirements to be eligible  for payments.2 
Title I authorizes separate revenue support programs for dairy and sugar.3 Specialty crops—such 
as fruits, vegetables, and tree nuts—are not covered by revenue support programs.4 
The revenue support programs are implemented by the Farm Service Agency within the U.S. 
Department of Agriculture (USDA) and are funded through the Commodity Credit Corporation.5 
Producers must meet eligibility  requirements to participate in the Title I commodity programs.6 In 
addition, producers that receive benefits under most of these programs are subject to annual 
payment limits. 
Although the ARC and PLC programs have been in existence since 2014, the delayed nature of 
payments under these two programs has made it difficult for policymakers to assess their 
effectiveness. This report examines available USDA  program data to compare participation rates 
and annual outlays for the three revenue support programs—MAL, ARC, and PLC—for 2014-
2018 based on historical data, along with projected outlays for 2019-2023 based on projections by 
the Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute (FAPRI) of the University of Missouri. The 
report ends with a discussion of issues related to MAL, ARC, and PLC that may be of potential 
interest to Congress. 
Two Tiers of Revenue Support 
Under the MAL, ARC, and PLC programs, most grain, oilseed, and pulse crop producers in the 
United States are eligible  for two tiers of revenue support (see text box below).7 
                                              
1 In addition to revenue support programs, T itle I authorizes the noninsured disaster assistance program for 
commodities not eligible  for crop insurance and modifies  the permanent disaster assistance programs that  are focused 
on livestock and tree crops. See CRS  In Focus IF11163, 2018 Farm  Bill Prim er: The Farm  Safety Net. 
2 See  CRS  Report R46248, U.S. Farm Programs: Eligibility and Payment Limits.  
3 T he dairy and sugar  programs are essential parts of the 2018 farm bill. However, because  their programs differ 
markedly from the MAL, ARC,  and PLC programs, they are not discussed  in this report. For more information on the 
dairy and sugar  programs, see CRS  In Focus IF11188, 2018 Farm  Bill Prim er: Dairy Program s; and CRS  In Focus 
IF10689, Farm  Bill Prim er: Sugar Program . 
4 However, many specialty crops qualify for certain disaster assistance programs and federal crop insurance. For 
information on farm programs that support specialty crop agriculture, see  CRS  In Focus  IF11317, 2018 Farm  Bill 
Prim er: Specialty Crops  and Organic Agriculture. 
5 See  CRS  Report R44606, The Commodity Credit Corporation: In Brief. 
6 CRS  Report R45659, U.S. Farm Program Eligibility and Payment Limits Under the 2018 Farm Bill (P.L. 115-334). 
7 For a list of eligible  commodities under  MAL, ARC,  and PLC, see  Table 2 at the end of this report or CRS  In Focus 
IF11164, 2018 Farm  Bill Prim er: Title I Com m odity Program s. 
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U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program Outlays, 2014-2020 
 
Figure 1. Price Loss Coverage (PLC) Payment Formula 
 
Source: Compiled  by CRS based on the 2018 farm bil  (P.L. 115-334). 
Notes: MAL = Marketing Assistance  Loan program; MYAP = the national market-year  average farm price.  The 
Olympic average (OA) is calculated by removing  the high and low years then averaging across the remaining 
years. Program  yields are historical  farm-level  yields used to determine  per-acre payment rates. 
Figure 2. PLC Low-Price Scenario for Rice 
 
Source: Compiled  by CRS. 
Notes: cwt. = hundredweight or 100 lbs.  This example assumes a farm with 100 base acres enrol ed  in the rice 
PLC program,  a program yield for rice of 70 cwt./acre, and a national OA for MYAP for 2013-2018 of $12.20 per 
cwt. In a declining market,  the per-unit payment rate increases until the farm price drops below the loan rate 
($7.00/cwt. for rice),  at which point the PLC payment rate is fixed at $14.00 - $7.00 = $7.00/cwt. If market 
prices decline further, benefits under the MAL program  may become available. 
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Figure 3. County-Level Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC) Payment Formula 
 
Source: Compiled  by CRS based on the 2018 farm bil  (P.L. 115-334). 
Notes: See notes for Figure 1. Al   references  to ARC refer  to the county-level, not the individual-level,  ARC 
program.  The ARC per-acre payment rate is capped at 10% of the ARC county benchmark revenue per acre. 
Figure 4. ARC Low-Revenue Scenario for Corn 
 
Source: CRS. 
Notes: bu. = bushel. Assumes  the five-year average price (excluding high and low years) is $3.70 per bushel and 
five-year average yield (excluding high and low years) is 150 bushels per acre. In this example, the maximum 
potential ARC payment rate is $55.50 per acre (10% of the benchmark revenue of $555 per acre). 
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The first tier of support is provided by the MAL  program in the form of a price floor and interim 
financing—a nonrecourse, nine-month loan at statutory loan rates for harvested production of 
eligible  crops (referred to as loan crops). USDA’s nonrecourse loan program was original y 
established in the 1930s as a government loan that did not need to be repaid if market prices 
remained below statutory support levels and the crop was surrendered to the government. The 
nonrecourse loan program was modified by the addition of special repayment benefits to become 
the MAL  program under the 1985 farm bil  (P.L. 99-198). The MAL program provides a price 
floor to producers of certain statutorily designated crops and sets a lower bound for per-unit 
payment rates under both ARC and PLC (see Figure 1 and Figure 3). It has been modified and 
extended by successive farm bil s, including the 2018 farm bil .8  
The MAL program may be supplemented by a higher, second tier of revenue support comprised 
of either (1) the PLC program, which provides price protection at the national level via statutorily 
fixed “reference” prices for eligible crops, or (2) the ARC program, which provides revenue 
protection via historical moving average revenue guarantees at the county or whole-farm level. 
Two Tiers of Market-Based Revenue Support 
Tier I: Market  Assistance Loan (MAL) Program 
First tier  revenue protection—in the form  of a price floor—is  available under the MAL program, which offers 
producers a commodity-specific,  statutorily fixed loan rate that is available for al  harvested production of eligible 
commodities  (referred  to as loan crops). See Table 2 for a list of MAL loan rates by loan crop.  A participating 
producer may put a harvested loan crop under a nine-month nonrecourse loan valued at the statutory commodity 
loan rate. Thus, the value of the loan is equal to the harvested crop (measured  in bushels or pounds) times  the 
loan rate (statutorily set at a price per unit). 
For a nonrecourse loan, USDA agrees  to accept the crop as ful  payment for the loan if a producer forfeits. The 
loan uses the crop as col ateral (thus coupling MAL benefits to current production), and the loan rate, in effect, 
establishes  a price guarantee. If local market prices increase  above the loan rate (plus interest),  a producer may 
repay the MAL and reclaim  the crop. If market  prices are below the loan rate, then other program  benefits are 
available to producers, including repayment of the loan at a USDA-announced lower  repayment rate, forfeiting the 
crop and retaining the value of the loan, or taking a loan deficiency payment in lieu of a MAL.9 
Tier II: Agricultural  Risk Coverage (ARC)  and Price Loss Coverage (PLC)  Programs 
A second, higher tier of support is available under the ARC and PLC programs.  Producers choose between  PLC 
and ARC depending on their preference  for protection against a decline in crop prices (PLC) or crop revenue 
(ARC).  
PLC provides  price protection based on reference  prices set in statute at levels  above the MAL loan rates (Figure 
1). The 2018 farm bil  added an escalator provision  that could raise a covered  commodity’s  effective reference 
price to as much as 115% of the statutory PLC reference  price based on market  conditions.10  
ARC provides  revenue protection based on the product of five-year Olympic  (excludes the high and low years) 
moving averages of both (1) historical  county yields  and (2) the higher of the national market-year  average farm 
price or the PLC effective reference  price (Figure 3).  
Each farm’s  historical program  acres  (referred to as “base” acres) and historical yields  are associated with specific 
program crops that are enrol ed in either ARC or PLC on a crop-by-crop basis. Producers may choose to 
participate in a mixture of both ARC and PLC for the base acres of different program  commodities. 
                                              
8 See  CRS  In Focus  IF11162, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: Marketing Assistance Loan Program . 
9 For a description of producer choices under  the MAL program, see CRS  Report R45730, Farm Commodity 
Provisions in the 2018 Farm  Bill (P.L. 115 -334). 
10 T he effective reference price is determined by formula as  the higher o f the statutory reference price (RP) or 85% of 
the five-year Olympic average of the market -year average farm price for the five preceding years, capped at 115% of 
the RP. 
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Alternatively,  instead of choosing commodity-specific  ARC and PLC, a farmer  could choose to combine al  of the 
farm’s  base acres for covered commodities  into a single, whole-farm  revenue guarantee under the farm-level 
“individual” ARC (ARC-IC) program.11  
MAL Is Coupled;  ARC and PLC Are Decoupled 
MAL benefits are linked to current production—a producer must harvest an eligible  crop to participate in the 
MAL program.  In contrast, ARC and PLC payments are made on a portion of enrol ed  base acres (85% under 
ARC and PLC; 65% under ARC-IC) and are therefore  decoupled from producer production choices.  In other 
words, a producer does not need to plant the crop to receive  a payment. However,  a producer must own or rent 
base acres and must enrol   those base acres for either PLC or ARC during USDA-announced sign-up periods. 
ARC and PLC Enrollment Under the 2014 and 2018 Farm Bills 
The ARC and PLC programs were first authorized under the 2014 farm bil  (Agricultural Act of 
2014; P.L. 113-79) for the crop years 2014-2018. At the start of the 2014 farm bil , participating 
producers were offered a one-time opportunity to enroll their historical program (or “base”) acres, 
on a crop-by-crop basis, for either ARC or PLC. The enrollment choice was to remain unchanged 
for the duration of the 2014 farm bil —that is, through the 2018 crop year. Under the 2014 sign-
up, producers enrolled 260 mil ion base acres for 20 covered commodities (see Figure 5). The 
three largest crops in terms of base acres—corn, soybeans, and wheat—accounted for 83% of 
enrolled base acres. 
Figure 5. Base Acres Enrolled Under 2014 and 2018 Farm Bills 
Base acres signed up for ARC or PLC by covered commodity 
 
Source: Compiled  by CRS from  U.S. Department of Agriculture  (USDA), Farm Service  Agency (FSA) data. 
Notes: Program crops eligible  for ARC and PLC are referred  to as “covered commodities.”  Under the 2014 
farm bil , a producer with base acres made a one-time choice for either  ARC or PLC for each relevant covered 
commodity  for the entire 2014-2018 period. Under the 2018 farm bil ,  the initial base acre sign-up was for the 
2019 and 2020 crop years, with an annual sign-up each year thereafter—2021, 2022, and 2023. *Base acres are 
historical  average acres on a farm that have been planted to program crops, defined under the 2002 farm bil  
(P.L. 107-171; §1101). Each base acre is associated with a particular program crop. Not al  base acres are 
enrol ed  in ARC and PLC programs.  Under the 2018 farm bil , producers had the option to real ocate  their base 
acres among program crops.  For details, see  CRS Report R45730, Farm Commodity  Provisions  in the 2018 Farm Bil  
(P.L. 115-334). **Generic  base is former  upland cotton base. Upland cotton was removed  from  eligibility  as a 
covered commodity  by the 2014 farm bil  (P.L. 113-79). However, it indirectly regained its status as a covered 
commodity,  via seed cotton, under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (P.L. 115-113). For details, see CRS Report 
R45143, Seed Cotton as a Farm Program Crop:  In Brief. 
                                              
11 See  CRS  In Focus  IF11161, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: ARC and PLC Support Programs. 
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The 2018 farm bil  extended both programs with several modifications intended to increase 
flexibility  in how producers use the programs.12 Producers could choose to real ocate their 
existing base acres between ARC and PLC on a commodity-by-commodity basis, effective for the 
2019 and 2020 crop years.13 If no initial choice was made, then the default was whichever 
program was in effect under the 2014 farm bil . Beginning  in 2021, producers can again choose 
between ARC and PLC annual y for each of the 2021, 2022, and 2023 crop years.  
Under the 2019 sign-up and real ocation, producers enrolled 253.5 mil ion base acres in ARC and 
PLC—a decline of 6.5 mil ion acres from the 2014 enrollment. A large portion of the difference 
in base acres was the result of the reassignment of generic base acres. Generic base acres were 
created in 2014 when upland cotton was removed from eligibility  for ARC and PLC payments. In 
2018, when the Bipartisan Budget Agreement (P.L. 115-123) added seed cotton as a covered 
commodity, generic base acres needed to be either assigned to a covered commodity or 
eliminated.14 Of the 17.6 mil ion  acres of former generic base, 13 mil ion were real ocated to seed 
cotton with the balance either enrolling under other covered commodities or dropping out of 
participation—likely  accounting for a substantial portion of the decline in total enrolled base 
acres. The share of total base acres for the top three crops—corn, soybeans, and wheat—increased 
from 83% to 84%. 
Participation Shifts from ARC to PLC Under 2018 Farm Bill 
Under the 2014 farm bil ,  most base acres (76.4%) were enrolled in the county-level ARC 
program, compared with 22.8% base acres enrolled in PLC (Figure 6). 
The preference for ARC under the 2014 sign-up was driven by the three largest crops—corn, 
soybeans, and wheat—which enrolled major portions of their base acres under the county-level 
ARC program, including 93.4% of corn base acres, 96.9% of soybeans, and 57.5% of wheat. The 
high ARC participation implies a low PLC participation for these three crops, as shown in Figure 
7. 
The high enrollment share for ARC under the 2014 sign-up for corn, soybeans, and wheat was 
due to their high farm prices during the 2010-2013 period (Figure 8). The prices for these years 
factored into the ARC revenue guarantee formula (which looked back over the five years from 
2009 to 2013) and assured producers of receiving payments for at least the first three years of the 
program (i.e., for 2014-2016). 
The 2018 farm bil ’s first sign-up (for the crop years 2019 and 2020) al owed producers to 
real ocate base acres between ARC and PLC. Enrollment results revealed that producers 
overwhelmingly shifted away from ARC and to PLC for al  crops (Figure 6). Total ARC 
participation fel  from 76.4% under the 2014 sign-up to 26.3% under the 2019-2020 sign-up, 
while PLC participation rose from 22.8% to 69.9%.  
                                              
12 See  CRS  Report R45730, Farm Commodity Provisions in the 2018 Farm Bill (P.L. 115 -334). 
13 Producers had until March 16, 2020, to complete their sign -up for the 2019 and 2020 crop years. ARC and PLC 
payments for the 2019 crop year are made after October 1 following the end of each crop’s marketing year. See  Table 
1 and Figure  14 later in this report for a discussion  of the ARC and  PLC payment schedule.  
14 For details on the addition of seed  cotton as a covered commodity and the reassignment of generic base  acres, see 
CRS  Report R45143, Seed Cotton as a Farm  Program  Crop: In Brief. 
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U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program Outlays, 2014-2020 
 
Figure 6. Enrollment of Base Acres by Program: PLC, ARC, and ARC-IC 
Share of enrol ed base by program for each sign-up period 
 
Source: FSA data on enrol ment  in ARC and PLC by program  crop base acres for the 2014 and 2018 farm bil s. 
The 2018 farm bil   enrol ment  shown in this chart is for the crop years 2019 and 2020. 
Figure 7. PLC Participation Rate: 2014 Versus 2018 Farm Bills 
Share of base acres enrol ed in PLC for selected covered commodities 
 
Source: FSA data on enrol ment  in ARC and PLC by program  crop base acres for the 2014 and 2018 farm bil s. 
The 2018 farm bil   enrol ment  shown in this chart is for the crop years 2019 and 2020. 
Notes: *Minor oilseeds  include sunflower,  flaxseed, canola, rapeseed,  mustard, safflower,  crambe, and sesame. 
The ARC participation rate may be derived by subtracting the PLC participation rate from 100%. For example, 
the soybean PLC participation rate under the 2014 farm bil  is 3.1%, and its ARC participation rate is 96.9%.  
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The largest shift occurred for corn base acres, which rose from 6.6% participation in PLC under 
the 2014 farm bil  to 75.5% enrollment in PLC under the 2019-20 sign-up (Figure 7). In addition, 
over 90% of base acres for wheat, sorghum, barley, pulses, minor oilseeds, rice, and peanuts 
enrolled in PLC under the 2019-2020 sign-up. The major exception was soybeans base acres, 
where 85.9% of producers preferred to stick primarily with ARC.  
The shift from ARC to PLC reflects expectations about the relationship between each 
commodity’s market-year average farm price (MYAP) relative to its reference price. When 
MYAPs are expected to remain above the reference price, the revenue-based ARC program offers 
a higher probability of making a payment than does the PLC program. The PLC program wil  not 
make a payment so long as the MYAP  remains above the reference price. In contrast, the ARC 
program uses a moving average revenue guarantee that rises with higher MYAPs and yields. A 
substantial drop in the national average yield in the current year may be sufficient to trigger an 
ARC payment, even if the MYAP  remains above the commodity’s reference price. This is 
particularly true for crops that have strong upward trends in their yields, such as corn and 
soybeans. This was clearly the case in 2014 when producers used the previous five years as a 
guide for the future and enrolled large percentages of their corn, soybean, and wheat base acres in 
ARC. 
In contrast, if a commodity’s MYAP is projected at levels below the reference price, then the PLC 
program may appear more attractive to many producers as a safety net against low prices. 
Accordingly, the preference for PLC under the 2018 farm bil  is supported by the projected 
outlook through 2025 for MYAPs to be below reference prices for many covered commodities, 
including corn and wheat (Figure 8). Soybeans are the notable exception, as FAPRI projects the 
MYAP  for soybeans to trend from slightly below the soybean reference price of $8.40 per bushel 
in 2020 to slightly above by 2025. Thus, many soybean producers continued to enroll their 
soybean base acres in ARC during the 2018 farm bil ’s initial  sign-up. 
Figure 8. MYAP as % of Reference Price for Corn, Soybeans, and Wheat Since 2005 
 
Sources: Calculations by CRS using reference  prices from  the 2018 farm bil ; historical prices  for 2005-2019 are 
from USDA,  National Agricultural Statistics Service  (NASS); projected prices for 2020 are from USDA,  World 
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Agricultural  Supply  and Demand,  September  11, 2020; and projected prices  for 2021-2025 are from FAPRI, Baseline 
Update for U.S. Farm Income and the Farm Balance Sheet, University of Missouri,  Report #04-30, August 2020.  
Notes: Reference prices  did not exist prior to the 2014 farm bil . However,  prior year farm prices are included 
in this chart to demonstrate their high levels  relative  to reference  prices.  *The Al   Wheat price is a composite 
price of the major  wheat varieties—Hard  Red Winter,  Soft Red Winter,  White,  Hard Red Spring, and Durum 
wheat. MYAPs for each crop have been divided by their respective  reference  price and multiplied  by 100 to 
facilitate relative  comparisons. 
Program Outlays Reflect Market Conditions 
Payments under MAL, as wel  as ARC and PLC, vary countercyclical y with market conditions ; 
that is, payments are contingent on relative prices—they tend to increase when farm prices fal  
below support levels and decline when farm prices rise above support levels. 
MAL Program Support Levels Are Low Relative to Farm Prices 
Prior to 2010, the MAL program played a major role in providing revenue support to producers of 
loan-eligible  crops (Figure 9). From 1998 through 2009, outlays under the MAL program 
averaged $3.6 bil ion  annual y, including $7.9 bil ion in each of 2000 and 2001. 
The MAL program began to diminish in effectiveness as a floor price, particularly for corn and 
soybeans producers, from 2010 to 2013. During this period, U.S. farm prices for most program 
crops reached record levels and rose substantial y above their statutorily fixed MAL loan rates. 
The 2014 farm bil  extended the MAL  program with no changes to the statutory loan rates. The 
2018 farm bil  raised MAL  rates for most loan commodities starting in 2019. The percentage 
increases in MAL rates varied across program crops—from a low of 7.7% for rice to a high of 
43.9% for oats—in an attempt to provide greater equity across program commodities.15 Prior to 
the rate increases under the 2018 farm bil , MAL rates had been left unchanged since the early 
2000s when provisions in the 2002 farm bil  (P.L. 107-171) made modest adjustments to several 
commodities.16 
More than $1 bil ion  in total MAL benefits were incurred during the five-year 2014 farm bil  
period (2014-2018) (Figure 10). Three commodities accounted for al  of the MAL outlays during 
this period: upland cotton ($718.3 mil ion, 70.1%); peanuts ($169.0 mil ion, 16.5%); and wheat 
($137.0 mil ion, 13.4%).  
MAL program outlays are not expected to play a major role in USDA  program support during the 
2018 farm bil  period—crop years 2019-2023—as the current outlook projects farm prices for 
most program crops to remain above their MAL loan rates throughout the period.17 
                                              
15 T he loan rates for minor oilseeds, peanuts, wool, mohair, an d honey were left unchanged  by the 2018 farm bill. For 
more information, see CRS  Report R45730, Farm  Com m odity Provisions in the 2018 Farm  Bill (P.L. 115 -334). 
16 T he 2008 farm bill adjusted  the MAL rates upwards  slightly for barley, oats, wheat, minor oilseeds,  graded  wool,  and 
honey. 
17 For example, see the price projections from USDA’s most recent baseline report at Erik Dohlman, James Hansen, 
and David Boussios,  USDA Agricultural Projections to 2029, OCE-2020-1, USDA, Economic Research Service  (ERS), 
February 2020; FAPRI, Baseline Update for U.S. Agricultural Markets,  FAPRI-MU Report #04-30, August 2020. 
Congressional Research Service 
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U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program Outlays, 2014-2020 
 
Figure 9. Monthly Farm Prices as % of MAL Loan Rate Since 1990 
 
 
Sources: Calculations by CRS using MAL program loan rates from  the 1990, 1996, 2002, 2014, and 2018 farm 
bil s.  Historical  monthly farm prices  for corn, soybeans, and al  wheat for 1990 to 2020 and peanuts for 2002 to 
2020 are from  USDA, NASS,  Agricultural Prices.  Historical  monthly average world prices  for cotton and rice are 
used in lieu of farm prices to capture potential MAL loan repayment rates.  Average world price data are from 
ERS, commodity  yearbook data tables for cotton and rice. 
Notes: *The Al  Wheat price is a composite  price of the major  wheat varieties—Hard  Red Winter,  Soft Red 
Winter,  White,  Hard Red Spring, and Durum wheat. Calculations for upland cotton and rice compare  their 
average world prices,  as announced by USDA for purposes of MAL loan repayment, with each commodity’s 
statutory loan rate. Peanuts were  added as a loan crop in 2002. This chart is indicative of potential MAL benefits. 
It likely  understates the extent of actual MAL benefits, which are based on daily or weekly  announced repayment 
rates that have more  variation than monthly averages. 
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U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program Outlays, 2014-2020 
 
ARC and PLC Outlays Large in 2014-2016, Declined in 2017-2018 
As mentioned earlier, the high commodity prices of the 2010-2013 period resulted in attractive 
ARC revenue guarantees under the Olympic average of prices from the preceding five years 
(Figure 8). This resulted in both high participation rates in ARC for corn, soybeans, and wheat 
base acres and substantial ARC payments during the first three years of the 2014 farm bil  period: 
$4.5 bil ion  in 2014, $6.0 bil ion in 2015, and $3.8 bil ion  in 2016 (Figure 10). By 2017, 
declining MYAPs from the 2014-2016 period had dampened the price component of the ARC 
revenue guarantee and reduced ARC payments in 2017 and 2018.  
Figure 10. MAL, PLC, and ARC Program Outlays, 2014-2023F 
Crop-year data; not adjusted for inflation 
 
Sources: Data for 2014-2018 are actual outlays compiled by CRS on a crop-year basis from FSA,  farm program 
data, March 12, 2020. Data for 2019 includes likely  PLC payments based on FSA base sign-up and announced 
PLC payment rates as of September  11, 2020. Al   other data for 2019-2023 are crop-year projections  derived by 
CRS using FAPRI’s “Baseline  Updated for U.S. Agricultural Markets,” University  of Missouri,  Report #03 -20, June 
2020. Nominal values are not adjusted for inflation. 
Notes: ARC and PLC program outlays correspond to the crop year for which the payment was triggered,  not 
the year the payment was made. MAL benefits include marketing loan gains, loan deficiency payments, and gains 
from forfeiture.   
MYAPs remained above reference prices for most program crops in 2014, thus limiting PLC 
outlays that year. Starting in 2015, wheat and corn MYAPs fel  below reference prices, and PLC 
payments began to rise. In 2016, PLC outlays reached $3.3 bil ion. MYAPs remained below 
reference prices for most commodities during 2017 and 2018, and PLC payments surpassed ARC 
payments in both of those years.  
Producers took notice of the higher payments under PLC compared with ARC, when MYAPs fal  
below reference prices. Looking forward, USDA’s most recent annual baseline report (February 
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U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program Outlays, 2014-2020 
 
2020) projects MYAPs for most major program crops to remain below reference prices through 
2029, thus favoring PLC over ARC in terms of the potential for receiving payments.18 
Comparison Betw een ARC and PLC Outlays by Commodity 
During the 2014 farm bil ’s five-year period, corn accounted for $11.3 bil ion (or 44%) of total 
combined ARC and PLC payments. Wheat accounted for $5.0 bil ion (19%), rice for $2.8 bil ion 
(11%), soybeans for $2.0 bil ion (8%), peanuts for $2.0 bil ion (8%), other feed grains for $1.5 
bil ion  (6%), and the remainder for $1.4 bil ion (5%). However, the payments were not evenly 
distributed over time—most of the payments to corn base acres came during the first three years 
of the 2014 farm bil   (2014-2016), when corn received $10.7 bil ion in combined ARC and PLC 
outlays (Figure 11). 
Figure 11. Combined ARC and PLC Outlays by Commodity, 2014-2018 
Crop-year data; not adjusted for inflation 
 
Source: Compiled  by CRS from  FSA, official program data, as of March 12, 2020. Outlays are for combined 
ARC and PLC payments by commodity. 
Notes: *Other includes minor oilseeds  and pulses for 2014-2018 and seed cotton for 2018. **Other feed grains 
include grain sorghum, barley, and oats. ARC and PLC program outlays correspond to the crop year for which 
the payment was triggered,  not the year the payment was made.  MAL benefits are not included in this chart. 
Comparison of ARC and PLC Outlays per Base Acre 
When the ARC and PLC outlays are compared as payments per base acre for the entire 2014-
2018 period, the average PLC payment is $29 per acre, and the ARC payment is $17 per acre 
                                              
18 For USDA’s  most recent baseline report, see Erik Dohlman, James Hansen, and  David Boussios,  USDA Agricultural 
Projections to 2029, OCE-2020-1, ERS, February  2020. See ERS,  “ Agricultural Baseline,” https://www.ers.usda.gov/
topics/farm-economy/agricultural-baseline/ for this and earlier reports. 
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U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program Outlays, 2014-2020 
 
(Figure 12). However, there is substantial variation among the program commodities. Peanuts 
had the highest PLC payment rate at $147 per acre. Long- and medium-grain rice also had large 
PLC payment rates at $133 and $66 per acre, respectively. 
Figure 12. Average Annual ARC and PLC Payment Rates per Base Acre 
Averages for 2014-2018 crop years 
 
Source: Compiled  by CRS from  FSA, farm program data, as of March 12, 2020. 
Notes: The averages are for enrol ed  base acres and have been adjusted for payments to generic acres during 
the 2014-2017 crop years. Seed cotton estimates  are for 2018 only. 
The three largest program crops in terms of total base acres—corn, soybeans, and wheat—had 
relatively modest ARC and PLC payment rates per acre: For corn, the ARC and PLC payment 
rates were $24 and $16 per acre, respectively; for soybeans, the rates were $7 and $0; and for 
wheat, $13 and $19. Seed cotton had the highest ARC payment rate at $44 per acre, but this may 
be misleading for two reasons. First, seed cotton was not eligible for ARC and PLC payments 
during 2014-2017, thus only payments for 2018 are included in the payment rate calculation. 
Second, 80% of seed cotton base was enrolled in PLC.19 Seed cotton’s PLC payment rate was $30 
per acre. 
Many farmers contend that higher-valued crops—such as peanuts, rice, and cotton, which also 
have higher costs of production—should necessarily receive higher subsidy rates. Farmers have 
long endorsed the concept of basing support on costs of production rather than dollars per acre, 
because costs have to be covered to stay in business and because costs of production vary widely 
                                              
19 According to USDA  data, in 2018, 11.9 million acres of seed  cotton base were enrolled in PLC (9.5 million acres), 
county-level ARC (2.1 million), or individual  farm-level ARC  (0.3 million). 
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U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program Outlays, 2014-2020 
 
across program crops. Economists, on the other hand, would general y use trend (or a moving 
average of) market prices as the basis for setting support prices in order to avoid market 
distortions and resource misal ocations. Both of these alternative measures of payment rates 
across program commodities produce different outcomes.20 
ARC and PLC Have a Delayed Payments Structure 
An important consideration in evaluating the effectiveness of ARC and PLC as farm revenue 
safety net programs is the timeliness of program payments. In particular, ARC and PLC program 
payments are made with a lag of at least one year from each crop’s harvest. This is because a full 
12-month marketing year must be completed to compile the annual price and yield data necessary 
for USDA’s payment calculations (Figure 13). According to statute, USDA is to announce 
payments no later than 30 days after the end of each marketing year, but the payments cannot be 
made prior to October 1 following the end of the applicable marketing year for each covered 
commodity.21 The marketing year varies by crop (Table 1). For example, the marketing year for 
corn or soybeans harvested in the fal  of 2020 ends on August 31, 2021. Thus, corn and soybean 
payments for the 2020 crops must be announced by September 30, 2021, but may not be made 
before October 1, 2021. 
Figure 13. Schedule for 2020 Corn ARC and PLC Payments 
 
Source: Compiled  by CRS. 
A result of the delayed payment protocol associated with ARC and PLC is that it makes tracking 
the payments associated with a particular crop more difficult. Consider the 2020 corn crop: It was 
planted in the spring of 2020—during the 2020 calendar and fiscal year—but any ARC and PLC 
payments wil  not be made until after October 1, 2021—during calendar 2021 and FY2022—
about when the following year’s (i.e., 2021) crop is being harvested.  
                                              
20 For a discussion  of the issues  related to basing support rates on costs of production and for a historical comparison of 
support rates relative to costs of production and market price trends, see archived CRS  Report RL34053, Measuring 
Equity in Farm  Support Levels, July  20, 2010 (available to congressional clients upon request). 
21 2018 farm bill (P.L. 115-334; §1106 for PLC, §1107 for ARC). 
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Table 1. Marketing Year and Payment Date for Major Covered Crops, 2020 Crop Year 
For payments under either the ARC or PLC program 
2020 (or equivalently  2020/2021) 
1st Potential 
Fiscal 
Covered Crop 
Marketing  Year 
Payment Date 
Year 
Wheat, barley, oats, canola, mustard, 
June 1, 2020, to May 31, 2021 
Oct. 1, 2021 
2022 
flaxseed, rapeseed,  safflower 
Rice, peanuts, seed cotton, sunflower 
Aug. 1, 2020, to July 31, 2021 
Oct. 1, 2021 
2022 
Corn, sorghum, soybeans  
Sept. 1, 2020, to Aug. 31, 2021 
Oct. 1, 2021 
2022 
Source: Compiled  by CRS. 
This timing shift in ARC and PLC payments across crop, calendar, and fiscal years can be seen in 
Figure 14, where the total payments do not change, but the timing results in a visible shift 
rightward as the data are tracked. In Figure 14, 
  the first (top) chart assigns payments to the crop year when they are triggered; 
  the second (middle) chart shows the actual timing of the payments by calendar 
year; and 
  the third (bottom) chart shows the timing of the payments by fiscal year—that is, 
from a federal budgetary perspective. 
Farm program spending data for each of these three time periods is used for different purposes. 
Crop-year program outlays are reported by USDA as part of U.S. domestic farm support in its 
annual notifications to the World Trade Organization. Calendar year farm program outlays are 
used by USDA’s Economic Research Service in calculating annual U.S. net farm income. Fiscal 
year program outlays are used by the Administration and Congress in the annual federal budget 
process. 
Congressional Research Service 
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U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program Outlays, 2014-2020 
 
Figure 14. ARC and PLC Payments by Crop 
Year, Calendar Year, and Fiscal Year 
 
 
 
Sources: Crop-year data for 2014-2018 are FSA farm program data, March 12, 2020; 2019-2020 data are crop-
year forecasts derived by CRS from FAPRI (June 2020); data for 2019 includes likely  PLC payments based on FSA 
base sign-up and announced PLC payment rates as of September  11, 2020. Calendar year data for 2014-2018 are 
from the ERS farm income data base; calendar year projections  for 2019-2020 are from FAPRI (September 
2020). Fiscal year data for FY2014-FY2018 are from the Congressional  Budget Office (CBO), USDA Baseline 
Congressional Research Service 
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U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program Outlays, 2014-2020 
 
Projections,  various years; projections for FY2019-FY2020 are from CBO’s USDA Baseline  Projections,  March 
2020. Nominal values are not adjusted for inflation. 
Note: MAL benefits include marketing loan gains, loan deficiency payments, and gains from  forfeiture.   
Some say that an effective safety net would link the payments closely to the circumstances that 
triggered them, as shown in the first (top) chart. The second and third charts show payments 
shifted substantial y to the right of the crop-year chart, which suggests that the actual “safety net” 
link is weak. The importance of this link for an individual  farm operation would depend on its 
financial situation: Can the farm wait one year or possibly longer for federal payments that are 
intended to partial y offset the economic losses as measured by the ARC or PLC program? For 
example, most producers would have to repay operating loans for the 2020 corn crop and 
purchase inputs for planting the 2021 crop nearly a year before ARC or PLC payments for the 
2020 crop would be received. 
One can also ask whether the ARC or PLC programs have reasonably estimated the economic 
damage that producers might have incurred. For example, under the decoupled nature of the ARC 
and PLC programs, a farm may not have even planted the crop that triggered the payment: Has 
the farm incurred a loss, or is the payment simply a taxpayer-funded income transfer? ARC and 
PLC were designed to accomplish multiple policy goals. Program attributes that contribute to 
meeting those multiple goals can make some results seem inconsistent with one-dimensional 
views of the program. ARC and PLC serve as a principal component of the farm safety net (along 
with crop insurance and disaster assistance), but they also comply with international trade 
commitments. The decoupling of ARC and PLC payments attempted to satisfy the international-
trade-compliance policy goal while minimal y  compromising their safety net function.  
From a budget perspective and for taxpayer accountability, the government’s policy is to wait to 
make payments until evidence of a loss is finalized. In the 1980s, the target-price deficiency 
payment (TPDP) program—a predecessor of ARC and PLC—was also tied to the marketing year 
price. However, the TPDP program provided advanced deficiency payments (equal to a portion of 
a preliminary estimate of the program’s total payment) based on USDA supply and demand 
estimates made early in the marketing year.22 The final TPDP payment amount was determined 
after the end of the marketing year, with the possibility that some of the advance payment would 
need to be returned. The advance payments were eliminated in the 2000s as a budget cutting 
measure, which maintained payments but scored budgetary savings by delaying the fiscal year 
timing. 
Issues for Congress 
This report provides an initial  assessment on the implementation of the revenue support programs 
of the 2014 and 2018 farm bil s. It is a starting point for a discussion of how wel  the MAL, ARC, 
and PLC programs have performed as farm safety net programs. It is intended to provide some 
context for future congressional consideration of farm policy, particularly in light of the 
substantial volume of ad hoc farm support payments that have been paid out in recent years, 
which are independent of farm-bil -authorized farm safety net programs. During the past three 
years (2018-2020), USDA has been expected to pay as much as $39 bil ion over and above the 
farm bil ’s traditional  support through MAL, ARC, and PLC, including $8.6 bil ion under the 
                                              
22 ERS,  Provisions of the Food, Agriculture, Conservation, and Trade Act of 1990 , Agricultural Information Bulletin 
no. 624, June 1991. 
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U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program Outlays, 2014-2020 
 
2018 Market Facilitation Payment program,23 $14.5 bil ion under the 2019 Market Facilitation 
Payment program,24 and potential y $16 bil ion  under the 2020 Coronavirus Food Assistance 
Program.25 This is in comparison to an estimated $11.5 bil ion in MAL, ARC, and PLC payments 
over the same 2018-2020 period.  
Several policy issue related to the MAL, ARC, and PLC programs may be of potential interest to 
Congress. They include the delayed payment schedule under both ARC and PLC programs—
payments do not occur until at least a year after the affected crop is harvested. Another perennial 
issue that chal enges policymakers is maintaining equity of support—for example, when 
considering statutory reference prices—across different program commodities under changing 
market conditions. Another potential policy issue is the extent to which the general level of farm 
prices has moved above MAL loan rates, thus diminishing their functionality as floor prices for 
eligible  crops. 
With respect to the implementation of the ARC and PLC programs, policymakers are chal enged 
by trade-offs between the dual policy objectives of complying with international trade 
commitments (thus, the decoupled nature of payments from production) and providing safety net 
support relative to market conditions. Also, there are trade-offs between linking payments to 
losses and the speed with which payments are made in response to market or production losses.  
Designing a farm safety net program clearly involves policy trade-offs. Policy designs of a farm 
safety net program might consider the many potential aspects of what constitutes an “effective” 
safety net program. The following questions suggest some of the different types of difficult policy 
trade-offs policymakers may confront if designing a farm safety net program: 
  To what extent should safety net payments be triggered by the occurrence of a 
bona fide “loss”—whether it be an unexpected decline in farm prices or an 
unexpected drop in yields per acre from historical trend levels—and what portion 
of a loss should the safety net payment be expected to offset? 
  What is the optimal balance between fully measuring a loss (some losses may 
take months to fully assess) and making a timely safety net payment in response 
to the loss?  
  How can a reasonable level  of program equity be measured and achieved in 
terms of safety net loss compensation across different program crops and 
regions? 
  How can a safety net payment respond meaningfully to a loss without providing 
an incentive to favor the production of one particular crop relative to other crops 
or relative to market conditions of supply and demand? 
  Are farm safety net programs providing a “fair” measure of safety net support to 
the U.S. agricultural sector relative to federal support in other sectors of the 
economy? 
                                              
23 CRS  Report R45310, Farm Policy: USDA’s 2018 Trade Aid Package. 
24 CRS  Report R45865, Farm Policy: USDA’s 2019 Trade Aid Package. 
25 As of September 27, 2020, USDA  had made payments of $10.2 billion out of a potential $16 billion appropriation. 
See  CRS  Report R46395, USDA’s Coronavirus Food Assistance Program  (CFAP) Direct Paym ents. 
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Table 2. Farm Prices, MAL Loan Rates, and Effective Reference Prices 
TIER II: Effective  RP =  
Olympic 
TIER I: 
5-Year 
Max of: 
Subject 
MAL 
Average 
2020 
to a 
Program 
Loan 
(OA)b 
MYAP 
Reference 
85% OA 
CAP of 
Commoditiesa 
Unit 
Rate  
MYAPc  
Forecastd 
Price (RP) 
MYAP 
115% RP 
 
 
($/unit) 
($/unit) 
($/unit) 
($/unit) 
($/unit) 
($/unit) 
Corn 
bu. 
$2.20 
$3.52 
$3.50 
$3.70 
$2.99 
$4.26 
Soybeans 
bu. 
$6.20 
$8.94 
$9.25 
$8.40 
$7.66 
$9.66 
Wheat, al  
bu. 
$3.38 
$4.73 
$4.50 
$5.50 
$4.02 
$6.33 
Peanuts 
cwt. 
$17.75 
$20.83 
$20.73* 
$26.75 
$17.71 
$30.76 
Sorghum 
bu. 
$2.20 
$3.26 
$3.50 
$3.95 
$2.20 
$4.54 
Barley 
bu. 
$2.50 
$4.76 
$4.45 
$4.95 
$2.50 
$5.69 
Oats 
bu. 
$2.00 
$2.46 
$2.70 
$2.40 
$2.09 
$2.76 
Rice, long grain 
cwt. 
$7.00 
$11.17 
$11.30 
$14.00 
$9.49 
$16.10 
Rice, medium  grain 
cwt. 
$7.00 
$13.57 
$11.50 
$16.10 
$11.53 
$18.52 
Dry peas 
cwt. 
$6.15 
$11.10 
$9.39* 
$11.00 
$9.44 
$12.65 
Lentils 
cwt. 
$13.00 
$24.03 
$17.10* 
$19.97 
$20.43 
$22.97 
Chickpeas, large 
cwt. 
$14.00 
$28.30 
$18.41* 
$21.54 
$24.06 
$24.77 
Chickpeas, smal  
cwt. 
$10.00 
$23.80 
$15.34* 
$19.04 
$20.23 
$21.90 
Cotton, uplande 
cwt. 
$52.00f 
$61.06 
$49.50* 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
Seed Cottong 
cwt. 
n/a 
$33.37 
n/a 
$36.70 
$28.65 
$42.21 
Sugar, refined beet 
cwt. 
$25.37 
$33.43h 
$44.00* 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
Sugar, raw cane 
cwt. 
$19.75 
$26.20i 
$26.30* 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
Wool,  graded 
cwt. 
$115.00 
$156.00j 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
Wool,  nongraded 
cwt. 
$40.00 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
Mohair 
cwt. 
$420.00 
$516.67k 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
Honey 
cwt. 
$69.00 
$211.93l 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
n/a 
Minor oilseedsm 
cwt. 
$10.09 
n/a 
n/a 
$20.15 
n/a 
$23.17 
Sunflower 
cwt. 
$10.09 
$17.53 
$20.87* 
$20.15 
$14.90 
$23.17 
Flaxseed 
cwt. 
$10.09 
$16.27 
$9.792* 
$20.15 
$13.83 
$23.17 
Canola 
cwt. 
$10.09 
$16.00 
$15.34* 
$20.15 
$13.60 
$23.17 
Rapeseed 
cwt. 
$10.09 
$21.50 
n/a 
$20.15 
$18.28 
$23.17 
Mustard 
cwt. 
$10.09 
$30.17 
n/a 
$20.15 
$25.64 
$23.17 
Safflower 
cwt. 
$10.09 
$20.23 
n/a 
$20.15 
$17.20 
$23.17 
Sources: MAL loan rates and reference  prices are from the 2018 farm bil  (P.L. 115-334). Farm price data are 
from NASS and ERS, Farm  Income and Wealth Statistics. 
Notes: MYAP = market-year average farm price, n/a = not applicable, bu. = bushel, cwt. = hundredweight or 
100 lbs. *Simple  average of monthly prices (January-July) for 2020. Tier II support also includes ARC revenue 
protection not listed in this table. 
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U.S. Farm Policy: Revenue Support Program Outlays, 2014-2020 
 
a. 
Tier I commodities  are referred  to as “loan” commodities;  Tier II commodities  are known as 
“covered” commodities.  Commodities  with a Reference Price  are covered commodities  eligible  for 
PLC or ARC.  
b.  The Olympic average excludes the high and low values then calculates the average from the remaining 
values.  
c. 
The Olympic average for crop years 2015-2019 of MYAPs. Average adjusted world prices are used for 
comparison of upland cotton and rice  MAL loan rates instead of farm prices.   
d.  Unless marked  with an asterisk  (*), the reported 2020 MYAP is a USDA  projection as reported in the 
World  Agricultural  Supply  and Demand Estimates,  September 11, 2020. If marked  with an asterisk,  the 
price shown in the column is the simple  average of monthly prices (January-July) for 2020. 
e.  Upland cotton was removed  from eligibility  by the 2014 farm bil  due to a ruling from a World Trade 
Organization dispute settlement  case successful y  brought by Brazil  against U.S. cotton support 
programs (CRS In Focus IF10193, The WTO Brazil-U.S. Cotton Case).  
f. 
The loan rate for upland cotton is the average MYAP for the preceding two years  but within a range of 
$45/cwt. and $52/cwt.  
g. 
Seed cotton was added as a covered  commodity,  but not a loan commodity,  by the Bipartisan Budget 
Act of 2018 (P.L. 115-123). Seed cotton is “deemed” to have a MAL loan rate of $25/cwt. for purposes 
of calculating the applicable ARC or PLC payment rate. 
h.  Olympic average of fiscal year prices for 2015-2019; U.S. wholesale refined beet sugar price,  Midwest 
markets,  Mil ing and Baking News, as reported  by ERS.  
i. 
Olympic average of fiscal year prices for 2015-2019; U.S. raw sugar price, Contract No. 14/16, duty fee 
paid New York,  as reported by ERS.  
j. 
Olympic average farm price received  for calendar years 2015-2019, with no distinction for graded or 
ungraded, as reported by NASS.  
k.  Olympic average of calendar year prices  for 2015-2019. 
l. 
Olympic average of calendar year prices  for 2015-2019. 
m.  Minor oilseeds  include the six listed oilseeds  (sunflower, flaxseed, canola, rapeseed,  mustard, and 
safflower) as wel   as crambe and sesame—but  these latter two are excluded due to insufficient data.  
 
Author Information 
 
Randy Schnepf 
   
Specialist in Agricultural Policy 
    
 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan 
shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and 
under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should n ot be relied upon for purposes other 
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in 
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not 
subject to copyright protection in the United States. Any CRS Report may be reproduced and distributed in 
its entirety without permission from CRS. However, as a CRS Report may include copyrighted images or 
material from a third party, you may need to obtain the permission of the copyright holder if you wish to 
copy or otherwise use copyrighted material. 
 
Congressional Research Service  
R46561 · VERSION 1 · NEW 
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