What Is the Farm Bill?
October 20, 2023
The farm bill is an omnibus, multiyear law that governs an array of agricultural and food
programs. Titles in the most recent farm bill encompassed farm commodity revenue supports,
Renée Johnson
agricultural conservation, trade and foreign food assistance, farm credit, research, rural
Specialist in Agricultural
development, forestry, bioenergy, horticulture, and domestic nutrition assistance. Typically
Policy
renewed about every five or six years, the farm bill provides a predictable opportunity for

policymakers to comprehensively and periodically address agricultural and food issues.
Jim Monke
Specialist in Agricultural
The most recent farm bill—the Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018, P.L. 115-334—was
Policy
enacted into law in December 2018 and expires in 2023. It succeeded the Agricultural Act of

2014 (P.L. 113-79). Provisions in the 2018 farm bill modified the structure of farm commodity
support, expanded crop insurance coverage, amended conservation programs, reauthorized and

revised nutrition assistance, and extended authority to appropriate funds for many U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) discretionary programs through FY2023.
At enactment in December 2018, the Congressional Budget
Farm Bill Titles with Mandatory Baseline, 10-Year
Office (CBO) estimated that the total cost of the mandatory
Projected Outlays, FY2024-FY2033 ($ billions, $1,463
programs in the farm bill would be $428 billion over its
billion total)
five-year duration, FY2019-FY2023, about $1.8 billion
more than if the 2014 farm bill were extended. On a 10-
year basis, the expected cost was $867 billion over
FY2019-FY2028, which was budget neutral compared to
extending the 2014 farm bill. Four titles accounted for 99%
of anticipated farm bill mandatory outlays: Nutrition, Crop
Insurance, Commodity Programs, and Conservation (see
graph). Programs in all other farm bill titles accounted for
about 1% of mandatory outlays. Many programs are
authorized to receive discretionary (appropriated) funds.
CBO released the budget baseline for scoring bills during
the 2023 legislative session in May 2023. Using this
projection for the major farm bill programs and funding
indicated in law for other farm bill programs that are not
included in the annual projection, the current baseline for

farm bill programs is estimated at $725 billion over 5 years
Source: CRS using the CBO Baseline (May 2023) for the five
(FY2024-FY2028) and $1,463 billion over 10 years
largest titles and amounts in law for programs in other titles.
(FY2024-FY2033).
The allocation of spending across titles in the farm bill over time is not a zero-sum game. Legislative changes enacted in each
farm bill account for only a fraction of the observed change between farm bills. Every year, CBO re-estimates the baseline to
determine expected costs. Baseline projections can rise and fall over time based on changes in economic conditions, without
action by Congress. For example, the relative proportions of farm bill spending have shifted over time. In the 2023
projection, the Nutrition title is 84% of the farm bill baseline compared with about 76% when the 2018 farm bill was enacted
and 67% in the 2008 farm bill. Sharp increases in the Nutrition title reflect pandemic assistance and administrative
adjustments made to SNAP benefit calculations. For non-nutrition farm bill programs, baseline amounts in 2023 are greater
than when the 2018 farm bill was enacted ($240 billion over 10 years as of 2023 compared with $210 billion over 10 years in
2018).
Congressional Research Service


link to page 4 link to page 7 link to page 7 link to page 9 link to page 10 link to page 11 link to page 12 link to page 12 link to page 13 link to page 14 link to page 14 link to page 15 link to page 15 link to page 15 link to page 16 link to page 16 link to page 16 link to page 17 link to page 17 link to page 6 link to page 9 link to page 10 link to page 11 link to page 11 link to page 12 link to page 8 link to page 19 What Is the Farm Bill?

Contents
What Is the Farm Bill? .................................................................................................................... 1
What Is the Estimated Cost of the Farm Bill? ................................................................................. 4
What Was the Expected Cost of the 2018 Farm Bill at Enactment? ......................................... 4
What Is the Budget for the Next Farm Bill? ............................................................................. 6
What Is the Effect of Supplemental Payments? ........................................................................ 7
Which Farm Bill Programs Do Not Have a Continuing Baseline? ........................................... 8
Title-by-Title Summaries of the 2018 Farm Bill ............................................................................. 9
Title I: Commodity Programs.................................................................................................... 9
Title II: Conservation .............................................................................................................. 10
Title III: Trade .......................................................................................................................... 11
Title IV: Nutrition ..................................................................................................................... 11
Title V: Credit .......................................................................................................................... 12
Title VI: Rural Development ................................................................................................... 12
Title VII: Research, Extension, and Related Matters .............................................................. 12
Title VIII: Forestry .................................................................................................................. 13
Title IX: Energy....................................................................................................................... 13
Title X: Horticulture ................................................................................................................ 13
Title XI: Crop Insurance.......................................................................................................... 14
Title XII: Miscellaneous .......................................................................................................... 14


Figures
Figure 1. Selected Dates for U.S. Farm Bill Policy and Selected Related Laws ............................. 3
Figure 2. Farm Bill Titles with Mandatory Baseline ....................................................................... 6
Figure 3. Baseline for Agriculture Programs in the Farm Bill ........................................................ 7
Figure 4. Conservation Title Baseline in the Farm Bill and Conservation Funding in the
Inflation Reduction Act ................................................................................................................ 8
Figure 5. 2018 Farm Bill Programs Without a Budget Baseline After FY2023, by Title................ 9

Tables
Table 1. Budget for the 2018 Farm Bill ........................................................................................... 5

Contacts
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 16

Congressional Research Service


link to page 12 link to page 12 What Is the Farm Bill?

What Is the Farm Bill?
The farm bill is an omnibus, multiyear law that governs an array of agricultural and food
programs. Although agricultural policies are sometimes created and changed by freestanding
legislation or as part of other major laws, the farm bill provides a predictable opportunity for
policymakers to comprehensively and periodically address agricultural and food issues. The farm
bill is typically renewed about every five or six years.1
Historically, farm bills focused on farm commodity program support for a handful of staple
commodities—corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton, rice, peanuts, dairy, and sugar. Farm bills have
become increasingly expansive in nature since 1973, when a nutrition title was first included.
Other prominent additions since then include conservation, horticulture, and bioenergy.2
The omnibus nature of the farm bill can create broad coalitions of support among sometimes
conflicting interests for policies that, individually, might have greater difficulty negotiating the
legislative process. This can lead to competition for funds provided in a farm bill. In recent years,
more stakeholders have become involved in the debate on farm bills, including national farm
groups; commodity associations; state organizations; nutrition and public health officials; and
advocacy groups representing conservation, recreation, rural development, faith-based interests,
local food systems, and certified organic production.
The Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018 (P.L. 115-334, H.Rept. 115-1072), referred to here as
the “2018 farm bill,” was the most recent omnibus farm bill. It was enacted in December 2018,
with most provisions expiring in 2023. It succeeded the Agricultural Act of 2014 (P.L. 113-79;
2014 farm bill). The 2018 farm bill contained 12 titles encompassing commodity revenue
supports, farm credit, trade, agricultural conservation, research, rural development, energy, and
foreign and domestic food programs, among other programs.3 (All titles in the 2018 farm bill are
described in the text box below and in the section “Title-by-Title Summaries of the 2018 Farm
Bill.”
) Provisions in the 2018 farm bill modified the structure of farm commodity support,
expanded crop insurance coverage, amended conservation programs, reauthorized and revised
nutrition assistance, and extended authority to appropriate funds for many U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) discretionary programs through FY2023.
Without reauthorization, some farm bill programs expire, such as the nutrition assistance
programs and the farm commodity revenue programs. Procedurally, the potential for expiration
and the consequences of expired law may motivate legislative action. Short-term extensions were
enacted for farm bills in 2008 and 2013. Without reauthorization or extension, support for certain
basic farm commodities would revert to long-abandoned—and potentially costly—supply-control
and price regimes under permanent law dating back to the 1940s. Some programs may cease to
operate, while others might continue to pay only existing obligations. Nutrition programs that
require reauthorization and are funded with mandatory spending can continue to operate via
appropriations acts. Many discretionary programs would lose their statutory authority to receive
appropriations, though an annual appropriations act could provide funding. Other programs
amended in the farm bill have permanent authority (e.g., crop insurance).4

1 See CRS Report R45210, Farm Bills: Major Legislative Actions, 1965-2018. Since the 1930s, there have been 18
farm bills (2018, 2014, 2008, 2002, 1996, 1990, 1985, 1981, 1977, 1973, 1970, 1965, 1956, 1954, 1949, 1948, 1938,
and 1933). Some researchers have identified other earlier enacted legislation considered to be “farm bill” legislation.
2 See also CRS In Focus IF12047, Farm Bill Primer: What Is the Farm Bill?.
3 See CRS Report R45525, The 2018 Farm Bill (P.L. 115-334): Summary and Side-by-Side Comparison.
4 See CRS Report R47659, Expiration of the Farm Bill.
Congressional Research Service

1

link to page 6 What Is the Farm Bill?

Titles of the Farm Bill: Functions and Major Issues
Title I, Commodity Programs: Provides farm payments when crop prices or revenues decline for major
commodity crops, including wheat, corn, soybeans, peanuts, rice, dairy, and sugar. Includes disaster programs to
help livestock and tree fruit producers manage production losses due to natural disasters. Other support includes
margin coverage program for dairy and marketing quotas, minimum price guarantees, and import barriers for sugar.
Title II, Conservation: Encourages environmental stewardship of farmlands and improved management on
private land through land retirement, conservation easements, working lands assistance, and partnership
opportunities.
Title III, Trade: Supports U.S. agricultural export programs and international food assistance programs. Major
programs include those that support agricultural trade promotion and facilitation and international food aid.
Title IV, Nutrition: Provides nutrition assistance for low-income households through programs including the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly known as food stamps) and The Emergency Food
Assistance Program (TEFAP).
Title V, Credit: Offers direct government loans and guarantees to producers to buy land and operate farms and
ranches. Eligibility rules and policies prioritize and increase assistance for beginning and socially disadvantaged
producers.
Title VI, Rural Development:
Supports rural housing, community facilities, business, and utility programs
through grants, loans and loan guarantees, and rural business and community development programs. Establishes
planning, feasibility assessments, and coordination with other local, state, and federal programs. Programs include
grants and loans for infrastructure, economic development, broadband, and telecommunications.
Title VII, Research, Extension, and Related Matters: Supports a wide range of agricultural research and
extension programs that expand academic knowledge about agriculture and food and help farmers and ranchers
become more efficient, innovative, and productive.
Title VIII, Forestry: Supports forestry management programs run by USDA’s Forest Service through the
management of public and private forest land through research, financial and technical assistance, and policy
amendments.
Title IX, Energy: Encourages the development of farm and community renewable energy systems through grants,
loan guarantees, and feedstock procurement initiatives. Provisions cover the production, marketing, and processing
of biofuels and biofuel feedstocks, and research, education, and demonstration programs.
Title X, Horticulture: Supports specialty crops, including fruits, vegetables, tree nuts, and nursery products,
through market promotion, plant pest and disease prevention, and research. Provides assistance to support USDA-
certified organic agricultural production and locally produced foods—both for crops and animal products.
Authorizes a regulatory framework for the cultivation of hemp.
Title XI, Crop Insurance: Enhances risk management through the permanently authorized Federal Crop
Insurance Program, which offers subsidized insurance policies to farmers to protect against losses in yield, crop
revenue, or whole farm revenue.
Title XII, Miscellaneous: Covers other programs and assistance, including livestock and poultry disease
preparedness and animal health. Includes programs for beginning farmers and ranchers and limited-resource and
socially disadvantaged farmers, among other miscellaneous provisions.
Figure 1 provides a timeline of selected important dates for U.S. farm bill policy and other
related laws. In many respects, agricultural policy in the United States began with the creation of
USDA, homesteading, and subsequent creation of the land-grant universities in the 1800s. Many
stand-alone agricultural laws were passed during the early 1900s to help farmers with credit
availability and marketing practices and to protect consumers via meat inspection.
Congressional Research Service

2


What Is the Farm Bill?

Figure 1. Selected Dates for U.S. Farm Bill Policy and Selected Related Laws

Source: Figure created by the Congressional Research Service (CRS).
Congressional Research Service

3

What Is the Farm Bill?

The economic depression and dust bowl in the 1930s prompted the first “farm bill” in 1933, with
subsidies and production controls to raise farm incomes and encourage conservation. Commodity
subsidies evolved through the 1960s, when Great Society reforms drew attention to food
assistance. The 1973 farm bill was the first “omnibus” farm bill. It included not only farm
supports but also food stamp reauthorization to provide nutrition assistance for needy individuals.
Subsequent farm bills expanded in scope, adding titles for formerly stand-alone laws such as
trade, credit, and crop insurance. New conservation laws were added in the 1985 farm bill,
organic agriculture in the 1990 farm bill, research programs in the 1996 farm bill, bioenergy in
the 2002 farm bill, and horticulture and local food systems in the 2008 farm bill.
What Is the Estimated Cost of the Farm Bill?
The farm bill authorizes programs in two spending categories: mandatory and discretionary.
• Mandatory spending programs generally operate as entitlements. Mandatory
spending is authorized and paid for when a law is enacted under budget
enforcement rules that use multiyear federal budget estimates.5
• Discretionary spending programs are authorized for their scope but are not
funded in the farm bill. They are subject to annual appropriations and may not
receive any funding or may receive less than the farm bill-authorized amount.
Mandatory spending programs usually dominate the farm bill debate and its budget. The farm bill
“pays” for mandatory spending in addition to determining policy. These procedures follow a
framework of laws for budget enforcement that use projected “baseline” and “scores” from the
Congressional Budget Office (CBO).
The CBO baseline represents an availability of funding; it is a projection at a particular point in
time of what future federal spending on mandatory programs would be assuming current law
continues. This baseline is the benchmark against which proposed changes in law are measured.
Having a baseline essentially gives programs built-in future funding if policymakers decide that
the programs are to continue. Straightforward reauthorization would have zero budget effect.
The impact (score) of a proposed bill that alters mandatory spending is measured in relation to the
baseline. Changes that increase spending relative to the baseline have a positive score; those that
decrease spending relative to the baseline have a negative score; and budget neutral refers to
having a zero score. Increases in overall cost beyond the baseline may be subject to budget
constraints, such as pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) requirements.6 Reductions from the baseline may be
used to offset other provisions in a bill that have a positive score or to reduce the federal deficit.
The annual budget resolution determines whether a farm bill will be held budget neutral, must
reduce spending, or may increase spending.7
What Was the Expected Cost of the 2018 Farm Bill at Enactment?
At enactment in December 2018, CBO estimated that the total cost of the mandatory programs in
the farm bill would be $428 billion over its five-year duration, FY2019-FY2023, about $1.8

5 See CRS Report R45425, Budget Issues That Shaped the 2018 Farm Bill.
6 See CRS Report R41157, The Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act of 2010: Summary and Legislative History.
7 CRS In Focus IF12233, Farm Bill Primer: Budget Dynamics.
Congressional Research Service

4

link to page 8 What Is the Farm Bill?

billion more than if the 2014 farm bill were extended. On a 10-year basis, the expected cost was
$867 billion through FY2028, which was budget neutral (Table 1).8
Four titles accounted for 99% of anticipated farm bill mandatory outlays: Nutrition, Crop
Insurance, Farm Commodities, and Conservation. The Nutrition title comprised 76% of
mandatory outlays, mostly for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly
known as food stamps). The remaining 24% covered mostly federal crop insurance and
commodity support (16%) and conservation (7%). Programs in other titles accounted for about
1% of mandatory outlays. However, many programs were authorized to receive discretionary
(appropriated) funds.
Since enactment of the 2018 farm bill, CBO has updated its projections of government spending
given new information about the economy and program participation.9 Generally, such changes
are due solely to changing economic conditions.
Table 1. Budget for the 2018 Farm Bill
(millions of dollars, 5- and 10-year totals, mandatory spending)

Five years (FY2019-FY2023)
10 years (FY2019-FY2028)
CBO
Score of
Projected
CBO
Score of
Projected
baseline
2018 farm
outlays at
baseline
2018 farm
outlays at
Farm bill titles
April 2018
bill
enactment
April 2018
bill
enactment
Commodities
31,340
+101
31,440
61,151
+263
61,414
Conservation
28,715
+555
29,270
59,754
-6
59,748
Trade
1,809
+235
2,044
3,624
+470
4,094
Nutrition
325,922
+98
326,020
663,828
+0
663,828
Credit
-2,205
+0
-2,205
-4,558
+0
-4,558
Rural Development
98
-530
-432
168
-2,530
-2,362
Research
329
+365
694
604
+615
1,219
Forestry
5
+0
5
10
+0
10
Energy
362
+109
471
612
+125
737
Horticulture
772
+250
1,022
1,547
+500
2,047
Crop Insurance
38,057
-47
38,010
78,037
-104
77,933
Miscellaneous
1,259
+685
1,944
2,423
+738
3,161
Subtotal
426,462
+1,820
428,282
867,200
+70
867,270
- Increase revenue
-
+35
35
-
+70
70
Total
426,462
+1,785
428,247
867,200
+0
867,200
Source: CRS from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) Baseline by Title (unpublished; April 2018); and
CBO cost estimate of the conference agreement for H.R. 2, December 11, 2018.
Notes: Baseline for the Credit title is negative because of receipts to the Farm Credit System Insurance Fund.
Baseline for the Rural Development “cushion of credit” is accounted for outside of the farm bil .

8 Congressional Budget Office (CBO) cost estimate of H.R. 2, the Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018, December 11,
2018.
9 For information on CBO baseline projections, see CBO, “Details About Baseline Projections for Selected Programs,”
USDA Mandatory Farm Programs data, at https://www.cbo.gov/data/baseline-projections-selected-programs#25.
Congressional Research Service

5

link to page 10
What Is the Farm Bill?

What Is the Budget for the Next Farm Bill?
CBO released an official budget baseline for scoring bills during the 2023 legislative session in
May 2023. Using this projection for the major farm bill programs, and funding indicated in law
for other farm bill programs that are not included in the CBO annual projection, the current
baseline for farm bill programs is estimated at $725 billion over 5 years (FY2024-FY2028) and
$1,463 billion over 10 years (FY2024-FY2033).10
Figure 2. Farm Bill Titles with Mandatory Baseline
10-year projected outlays, FY2024-FY2033, billions of dollars, $1,463 billion total

Sources: Created by CRS using Congressional Budget Office (CBO) May 2023 Baseline for the five largest titles
and amounts indicated in law for programs in other titles.
The relative proportions of farm bill spending have shifted over time. In the 2023 projection, the
Nutrition title is 84% of the farm bill baseline, compared with about 76% when the 2018 farm bill
was enacted. The increase in the 10-year baseline for the Nutrition title since 2018 is 84%,
reflecting consequences of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, inflation, and
administrative adjustments in the Thrift Food Plan pursuant to the 2018 farm bill. For the non-
nutrition agriculture programs in the farm bill, current economic projections are that program
outlays would be $240 billion over the next 10 years (Figure 3), $30 billion or 14% greater than
the 10-year projection at enactment in 2018.

10 Farm bills have 5-year and 10-year budget projections according to federal budgeting practices.
Congressional Research Service

6


What Is the Farm Bill?

Figure 3. Baseline for Agriculture Programs in the Farm Bill
10-year projected outlays (excluding the Nutrition title), FY2024-FY2033, millions of dollars

Source: Created by CRS using the CBO May 2023 baseline for the four largest titles and amounts indicated in
law for programs in other titles.
What Is the Effect of Supplemental Payments?
Supplemental spending (i.e., spending for agriculture and nutrition programs that is not provided
for in the farm bill) is not part of the baseline but may be important in considering the next farm
bill because of the magnitude of supplemental spending in recent years. In FY2019 and FY2020,
the Trump Administration increased outlays by over $25 billion to producers affected by
retaliatory tariffs. Since FY2020, Congress and the White House have provided supplemental
pandemic assistance of over $30 billion to farms and over $60 billion for nutrition assistance. The
Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 (P.L. 117-58) provided $2.9 billion for USDA
broadband and watershed programs. The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (P.L. 117-169) added
over $17 billion in outlays through FY2031 for four programs in the farm bill’s Conservation title
Congressional Research Service

7

link to page 11 link to page 12
What Is the Farm Bill?

and one program in the Energy title (Figure 4).11 Since 2018, Congress has authorized more than
$15 billion of ad hoc disaster assistance for agricultural losses.12 The supplemental funding is not
regular farm bill funding. Congress may wish to consider the effectiveness of farm bill programs
in light of this accumulated additional funding.
Figure 4. Conservation Title Baseline in the Farm Bill and Conservation Funding in
the Inflation Reduction Act

Source: Created by CRS using the May 2023 CBO baseline.
Which Farm Bill Programs Do Not Have a Continuing Baseline?
Twenty-one programs, shown in Figure 5, received mandatory funding in the 2018 farm bill but
do not have a baseline beyond FY2023. As Congress balances budget considerations, providing
mandatory funding for programs without baseline would require budgetary offsets. These 21
programs received $906 million of mandatory funding during the five years of the 2018 farm bill
(out of total mandatory spending of $428 billion across all farm bill programs). Programs that
receive mandatory funding do not require annual discretionary appropriations.
From a budgetary perspective, many programs are assumed to continue beyond the end of their
authorization. That is, they have a continuing baseline beyond the end of a farm bill, which gives
them built-in future funding if policymakers decide that the programs are to continue, or, if not,
the baseline can be reallocated or used as an offset for deficit reduction. Reauthorizing farm bill
programs without baseline
would have a positive score (cost) and would likely need to be offset
by reductions elsewhere.
For more background, see CRS In Focus IF12115, Farm Bill Primer: Programs Without Baseline
Beyond FY2023
.

11 For more background, see CRS Insight IN11978, Inflation Reduction Act: Agricultural Conservation and Credit,
Renewable Energy, and Forestry
, and CRS Report R47478, Agricultural Conservation and the Next Farm Bill.
12 For more background, see CRS In Focus IF12101, Farm Bill Primer: Disaster Assistance.
Congressional Research Service

8


What Is the Farm Bill?

Figure 5. 2018 Farm Bill Programs Without a Budget Baseline After FY2023, by Title

Source: Created by CRS using CRS Report R45425, Budget Issues That Shaped the 2018 Farm Bill, Table 3, table
notes b and c.
Notes: Programs in P.L. 115-334 are identified as having mandatory budgetary outlays during FY2019-FY2023
but no budget authority beyond FY2023. See CBO, H.R. 2, Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018, December 11,
2018, at https://www.cbo.gov/publication/54880.
Title-by-Title Summaries of the 2018 Farm Bill
Following are summaries of the major provisions of each title, as organized in the 2018 farm bill.
For more detailed information about the development of provisions in the 2018 farm bill, see
CRS Report R45525, The 2018 Farm Bill (P.L. 115-334): Summary and Side-by-Side
Comparison
.
For a contemporary discussion of title-by-title policy options proposed by stakeholders for
Congress to consider in the next farm bill, see CRS Report R47057, Preparing for the Next Farm
Bill
, and CRS Report R47313, Next Farm Bill Primer Series: A Guide to Agriculture and Food
Programs in the 2018 Farm Bill
.
Title I: Commodity Programs13
The Commodity Programs title authorizes support programs for dairy, sugar, and covered
commodities—including major grain, oilseed, and pulse crops—as well as agricultural disaster
assistance. The 2018 farm bill extended authority for most current commodity programs but with
some modifications. Major field-crop programs included Price Loss Coverage (PLC),

13 See CRS In Focus IF11163, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: The Farm Safety Net; CRS In Focus IF11164, 2018 Farm Bill
Primer: Title I Commodity Programs
; and CRS In Focus IF11188, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: Dairy Programs.
Congressional Research Service

9

What Is the Farm Bill?

Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC), and Marketing Assistance Loans (MAL). The dairy program
protected a portion of the margin between milk and feed prices. The sugar program provided a
combination of price supports, limits on imports, and processor/refiner marketing allotments.
Four disaster assistance programs focused primarily on livestock and tree crops. Title I also
included several administrative provisions that set payment limits, an adjusted gross income
(AGI) threshold, and other details for payment attribution and eligibility.
The 2018 farm bill provided producers the flexibility of switching between ARC and PLC
coverage under certain conditions. Producers could update their program yields for the PLC, and
an escalator provision was added that could potentially raise a covered commodity’s effective
reference price. For ARC, data from the Risk Management Agency became the primary source for
county average yields, which was intended to avoid cross-county disparities in payments. For the
marketing assistance loan program, rates increased for several crops, including barley, corn, grain
sorghum, oats, extra-long-staple cotton, rice, soybeans, dry peas, lentils, and small and large
chickpeas. Regarding payment limitations, the definition of family farm expanded to include first
cousins, nieces, and nephews, thus increasing eligibility.
For dairy, a new Dairy Margin Coverage (DMC) program added higher levels of margin
coverage, provided for lower producer-paid premium rates for 5 million pounds or less of milk
production, and allowed producers to cover a larger percentage of milk production compared with
the 2014 Margin Protection Program. Under DMC, premiums were designed to incentivize higher
levels of coverage. Producers could participate in both margin coverage and the Livestock Gross
Margin-Dairy insurance program that insured the margin between feed costs and a designated
milk price.
For assistance following a disaster, the 2018 farm bill amended payments for livestock and tree
losses and removed select payment limitations. It also expanded eligibility for the Noninsured
Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) and amended payment calculations and service fees.
Title II: Conservation14
The Conservation title provides assistance to agricultural producers by addressing environmental
resource concerns on private land through land retirement, conservation easements, working
lands assistance, and partnership opportunities. The 2018 farm bill reauthorized and amended
many of the largest conservation programs and created a number of new pilot programs, carve-
outs, and initiatives.
The two largest working lands programs—Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) and
Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP)—were reauthorized and amended. Enrollment for CSP
was reduced and funds were shifted, in part, to EQIP and other farm bill conservation programs.
EQIP was expanded to irrigation and drainage entities, and additional funding carve-outs and
pilot projects were authorized. The largest land retirement program—the Conservation Reserve
Program (CRP)—was reauthorized and expanded by incrementally increasing the enrollment
limit from 24 million acres in FY2019 to 27 million acres by FY2023. CRP payments to
participants were reduced, and additional subprograms were authorized. The Regional
Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP) was redefined as a stand-alone program with separate
contracts and an expanded scope of eligible projects. Agricultural land easements in the
Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP) were amended to provide additional
flexibility to eligible entities.

14 See CRS Report R45698, Agricultural Conservation in the 2018 Farm Bill; or CRS In Focus IF11199, 2018 Farm
Bill Primer: Title II Conservation Programs
.
Congressional Research Service

10

What Is the Farm Bill?

Title III: Trade15
The Trade title addresses U.S. agricultural export programs and U.S. international food assistance
programs. Major programs support agricultural trade promotion and facilitation, such as the
Market Access Program, and the primary U.S. international food assistance program, Food for
Peace (FFP) Title II.
The 2018 farm bill reauthorized existing U.S. export promotion programs and consolidated four
programs into a new Agricultural Trade Promotion and Facilitation Program (ATPFT) that
established permanent mandatory funding. It also established a Priority Trade Fund within
ATPFT. The enacted law also reauthorized direct credits or export credit guarantees for the
promotion of agricultural exports to emerging markets.
The 2018 farm bill reauthorized all international food assistance programs as well as certain
operational details such as prepositioning of agricultural commodities and micronutrient
fortification. It also added a provision requiring that food vouchers, cash transfers, and local and
regional procurement of non-U.S. foods avoid market disruption in the recipient country. The
2018 farm bill amended FFP Title II by eliminating the requirement to monetize—that is, sell on
local markets to fund development projects—at least 15% of FFP Title II commodities. It also
increased the minimum level of FFP Title II funds allocated for nonemergency assistance. The
2018 farm bill also reauthorized and/or amended other international food assistance programs,
including the McGovern-Dole program.
Title IV: Nutrition16
The Nutrition title provides food assistance for low-income households through programs
including SNAP and The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP). The 2018 farm bill
amended various aspects of the programs and reauthorized them through FY2023. Rules
regarding SNAP eligibility and benefit calculation were largely maintained, including general
work requirements and the time limit for nondisabled adults without dependents. The law
required some changes to the calculation for homeless households’ benefits as well as certain
aspects of benefit calculation. Among other program integrity policies, the 2018 farm bill
established a National Accuracy Clearinghouse to identify concurrent enrollment in multiple
states.
For the SNAP Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) system, the 2018 farm bill placed limits on fees,
shortened the time frame for unused benefits, and changed the authorization requirements for
some farmers’ market operators. It required nationwide online acceptance of SNAP benefits and
authorized a pilot project about recipients’ use of mobile technology to redeem SNAP benefits.
The 2018 farm bill further reauthorized, renamed, and expanded the Food Insecurity Nutrition
Incentive (FINI, now the Gus Schumacher Nutrition Incentive Program), a grant program for
projects that incentivize SNAP and other low-income participants’ purchase of fruits and
vegetables. The 2018 farm bill also continued funding for the Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition
Program and reauthorized but reduced funding for the Community Food Projects grants.
It also reauthorized and revised food distribution programs. Supporting emergency feeding
organizations, the bill reauthorized TEFAP and authorized new projects to facilitate the donation
of raw/unprocessed commodities. The Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations now

15 See CRS In Focus IF11223, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: Agricultural Trade and Food Assistance.
16 See CRS In Focus IF11087, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: SNAP and Nutrition Title Programs.
Congressional Research Service

11

What Is the Farm Bill?

requires the federal government to pay at least 80% of administrative costs and includes a
demonstration project for tribes to purchase their own commodities.
Title V: Credit
The Credit title offers direct government loans to farmers/ranchers and guarantees on private
lenders’ loans. For the USDA farm loan programs, the 2018 farm bill added criteria that may be
used to reduce a three-year farming experience requirement. It raised the maximum loan size for
guaranteed loans by about 25%. It further doubled the limit for direct farm ownership loans and
increased the direct operating loan limit by one-third. Beginning and socially disadvantaged
farmers benefited from a higher guarantee percentage on loans. For the Federal Agricultural
Mortgage Corporation (known as FarmerMac), the 2018 farm bill increased an acreage exception
to remain a qualified loan. For the Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation, the farm bill
provided greater statutory guidance about its conservatorship and receivership authorities, which
are largely modeled after the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. It also reauthorized the State
Agricultural Loan Mediation Program and expanded the range of eligible issues.
Title VI: Rural Development17
The Rural Development title supports rural business and community development. The 2018 farm
bill made changes to existing USDA programs. It temporarily prioritized public health
emergencies and substance use disorder, including in the Distance Learning and Telemedicine
Program, the Community Facilities Program, and the Rural Health and Safety Education
Program. For rural broadband deployment, the 2018 farm bill authorized the Rural Broadband
Access Program to provide grants in addition to direct and guaranteed loans and increased the
minimum acceptable speed levels for broadband service. The farm bill reauthorized the Rural
Energy Savings Program and amended the program to allow off-grid and energy storage systems.
It amended the definition of rural to exclude individuals incarcerated on a “long-term or regional
basis” and excluded the first 1,500 individuals who reside in housing located on military bases.
The 2018 farm bill further provided that areas defined as rural between 1990 and 2020 may
remain so until the 2030 census. It amended the Cushion of Credit Payments Program for rural
utilities to cease new deposits and to modify the interest rate.
Title VII: Research, Extension, and Related Matters18
The Research title supports agricultural research at the federal level and provides support for
cooperative research, extension, and postsecondary agricultural education programs. The 2018
farm bill reauthorized several existing programs and established new programs and initiatives.
The 2018 farm bill also amended and reauthorized funding for the competitively awarded
Agriculture and Food Research Initiative (AFRI), Organic Agriculture Research and Extension
Initiative (OREI), and Specialty Crop Research Initiative (SCRI). It reauthorized the Expanded
Food and Nutrition Education Program (EFNEP), which distributes funds to eligible applicants
on a formula basis. It enhanced mandatory funding and required a strategic plan for the
Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research (FFAR).
Among new programs and initiatives, the 2018 farm bill established the Agriculture Advanced
Research and Development Authority Pilot, research Centers of Excellence at 1890 Institutions

17 See CRS In Focus IF11225, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: Rural Development Programs.
18 See CRS In Focus IF11319, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: Agricultural Research and Extension.
Congressional Research Service

12

What Is the Farm Bill?

(historically black land-grant colleges and universities), and competitive grants programs to
benefit tribal students and those at 1890 Institutions. It also established new competitive research
and extension grants for hemp research and indoor and urban agriculture.
Title VIII: Forestry19
The Forestry title supports forestry management programs run by USDA’s Forest Service. The
2018 farm bill continued provisions related to forestry research and provided financial and
technical assistance to nonfederal forest landowners. It also included several provisions
addressing management of the National Forest System lands managed by the Forest Service and
the public lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management in the Department of the Interior.20
It reauthorized the Healthy Forests Reserve Program, Rural Revitalization Technology, National
Forest Foundation, and funding for implementing statewide forest resource assessments. It
authorized financial assistance for large restoration projects that cross landownership boundaries.
The farm bill also addressed issues related to the accumulation of biomass and the associated risk
for uncharacteristic wildfires.
The 2018 farm bill changed how the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management comply
with the National Environmental Policy Act for management of sage grouse and mule deer
habitat. It also changed the Forest Service’s authority to designate insect and disease treatment
areas and procedures intended to expedite the environmental analysis. It established two
watershed protection programs on National Forest System lands and authorized acceptance of
cash or in-kind donations for those programs.
Title IX: Energy21
The Energy title encourages the development of biofuels and farm and community renewable
energy systems through grants, loan guarantees, and a feedstock procurement initiative. It also
supports increases in energy efficiency as well as the development of biobased products. The
2018 farm bill extended eight programs and one initiative through FY2023, repealed one program
and one initiative (the Repowering Assistance Program and the Rural Energy Self-Sufficiency
Initiative), and established one new grant program (the Carbon Utilization and Biogas Education
Program). It amended the Biomass Crop Assistance Program to include algae. It also modified the
definitions of biobased product (to include renewable chemicals), biorefinery (to include the
conversion of an intermediate ingredient or feedstock), and renewable energy systems (to include
ancillary infrastructure such as a storage system). Compared to previous farm bills, the 2018 farm
bill provided less mandatory funding for existing USDA energy programs.
Title X: Horticulture22
The Horticulture title supports specialty crops—as defined in statute, covering fruits, vegetables,
tree nuts, and nursery products—through a range of initiatives, including market promotion, plant
pest and disease prevention, and public research. The title also provides support to certified
organic agricultural production and locally produced foods.

19 See CRS In Focus IF10681, Farm Bill Primer: Forestry Title.
20 See CRS Report R45696, Forest Management Provisions Enacted in the 115th Congress.
21 See CRS In Focus IF10639, Farm Bill Primer: Energy Title.
22 See CRS In Focus IF11317, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: Specialty Crops and Organic Agriculture.
Congressional Research Service

13

What Is the Farm Bill?

The 2018 farm bill reauthorized many of these provisions, including block grants to states,
support for farmers markets, data and information collection, education on food safety and
biotechnology, and organic certification. Provisions affecting the specialty crop, certified organic,
and local foods sectors were not limited to the Horticulture title (Title X) but were contained
within several other titles, including the Research, Nutrition, and Trade titles.
The 2018 farm bill expanded and added funding for farmers markets and local food promotion
programs by combining existing programs to create a new Local Agriculture Market Program.
Other provisions supporting local and urban agriculture development were housed in the
Miscellaneous, Research, Conservation, and Crop Insurance titles.23 The 2018 farm bill made
changes to USDA’s National Organic Program (NOP) and related programs, addressing concerns
about organic import integrity by including provisions that strengthen the tracking, data
collection, and investigation of organic product imports. It also expanded mandatory funding for
the National Organic Certification Cost Share Program and expanded support for technology
upgrades to improve tracking and verification of organic imports.
The 2018 farm bill authorized establishing a regulatory framework for the cultivation of hemp (as
defined in statute) and created a new regulatory program for hemp production under USDA’s
oversight. Related provisions expanded the statutory definition of hemp and expanded eligibility
to produce hemp to a broader set of producers and groups, including tribes and territories.
Provisions in other titles further expanded support for hemp, including making hemp eligible for
federal crop insurance and certain USDA research programs, as well as excluding hemp from the
statutory definition of marijuana under the Controlled Substances Act.24
Title XI: Crop Insurance
The Crop Insurance title modifies the permanently authorized Federal Crop Insurance Act. The
federal crop insurance program offers subsidized policies to farmers to protect against losses in
yield, crop revenue, or whole farm revenue.
The 2018 farm bill made several modifications. It expanded coverage by authorizing catastrophic
policies for forage and grazing crops and grasses. It also allowed producers to purchase separate
crop insurance policies for crops that can be both grazed and mechanically harvested on the same
acres and to receive independent indemnities for each intended use. For crop insurance research
and development, the farm bill redefined beginning farmer or rancher as an individual having
actively operated and managed a farm or ranch for less than 10 years. This redefinition made
these individuals eligible for federal subsidy benefits of whole-farm insurance plans.
The farm bill also allowed waivers of certain viability and marketability requirements for
developing a policy or pilot program for the production of hemp. It further added hemp (as
defined in statute) as an eligible crop for federal crop insurance and to the limited list of crops
that cover post-harvest losses.
Title XII: Miscellaneous
The Miscellaneous title of the 2018 farm bill covered a wide array of issues across six subtitles,
including livestock, agriculture and food defense, historically underserved producers, Department
of Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994 Amendments, and other general provisions.

23 See CRS In Focus IF11252, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: Support for Local Food Systems; and CRS In Focus IF11210,
2018 Farm Bill Primer: Support for Urban Agriculture.
24 See CRS In Focus IF11088, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: Hemp Cultivation and Processing.
Congressional Research Service

14

What Is the Farm Bill?

The livestock provisions established the National Animal Disease Preparedness Response
Program and the National Animal Vaccine and Veterinary Countermeasures Bank. Other livestock
provisions authorized appropriations for the Sheep Production and Marketing Grant Program;
added llamas, alpacas, live fish, and crawfish to the list of covered animals under the Emergency
Livestock Feed Assistance Act; and established regional cattle and carcass grading centers. Other
animal-related provisions banned the slaughter of dogs and cats, imposed a ban on animal
fighting in U.S. territories, and required a report on the importation of dogs.
The Miscellaneous title included a number of other provisions covering a wide range of policy
issues. Among these, it directed USDA to restore certain exemptions for inspection and weighing
services that were included in the United States Grain Standards Act but were rescinded by
USDA when the act was reauthorized in 2015. It amended the Controlled Substances Act to
exclude hemp (as defined in statute) from the statutory definition of marijuana. The enacted law
also established the Farming Opportunities Training and Outreach program by combining and
expanding programs for beginning, limited resource, and socially disadvantaged farmers and
ranchers.25 It further extended outreach and technical assistance programs for socially
disadvantaged farmers and ranchers and added military veteran farmers and ranchers as a
qualifying group. It also created a military veterans agricultural liaison within USDA to advocate
for and provide information to veterans and established an Office of Tribal Relations to
coordinate USDA activities with Native American tribes.26 The farm bill required USDA to
conduct additional planning and monitoring of plant disease and pest concerns and reauthorized
policies supporting citrus growers and cotton and wool apparel manufacturers.



25 See CRS In Focus IF11227, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: Beginning Farmers and Ranchers.
26 See CRS In Focus IF11093, 2018 Farm Bill Primer: Veteran Farmers and Ranchers.
Congressional Research Service

15

What Is the Farm Bill?


Author Information

Renée Johnson
Jim Monke
Specialist in Agricultural Policy
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 not 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
RS22131 · VERSION 76 · UPDATED
16