The following is an op-ed from Celeste Meiffren, field director with Illinois PIRG.
When Congress turns to reauthorizing the federal Farm Bill this
summer, you might think that only farmers should care. But in reality,
the decisions they make impact all of us, because there’s a real risk
Congress will maintain a broken status quo that lavishes taxpayer
dollars on the junk food ingredients that are helping to fuel the
obesity epidemic.
Current food policy disproportionately
subsidizes already-profitable agribusinesses that don’t need the cash.
Of $262 billion in taxpayer subsidies since 1995, almost three quarters
of the dollars went to just 4% of farmers. Directing taxpayer dollars
to these mature, profitable businesses enriches them at the expense of
smaller, unsubsidized farmers, without any benefit to the taxpayers who
are footing the bill. And the industry knows when they’ve got a good
thing going: the last time the Farm Bill was up for reauthorization, in
2008, they spent $200 million on lobbying and campaign contributions to
maintain and expand these giveaways.
But agricultural subsidies
don’t just waste taxpayer dollars – they also subsidize unhealthy
additives that are fueling the obesity epidemic. Subsidized corn and
soy are processed into junk food ingredients like high-fructose corn
syrup and soy-based vegetable oils and shortenings. Taxpayer support
for just four such ingredients comes to over $1 billion a year. This at
a time when childhood obesity has reached epidemic proportions, with
one out of three kids overweight or obese, and an increasing prevalence
of Type II diabetes in young people meaning we no longer call it
“adult-onset diabetes.” Obesity adds $147 billion a year to our
nation’s health care costs – and we’re spending taxpayer dollars to
underwrite the epidemic.
The current Farm Bill expires this
year, offering an opportunity for much-needed reform. Unfortunately, the
Senate Agriculture Committee has recommended legislation that risks
making the problem worse. Their approach tiptoes in the direction of
reform by ending one of the worst subsidy programs, but it would create a
new scheme that shares many of the same characteristics.
The
proposed Agriculture Risk Coverage program would create a revenue
guarantee that would most benefit the largest agribusinesses, and again
the lion’s share of the dollars would flow to the corn and soy that
serve as raw materials for junk food. The program would also lock in the
current, high price levels for corn and soy for years to come, with
taxpayer dollars serving to needlessly insulate the already profitable
agribusinesses from the laws of supply and demand, and could cost
taxpayers $30 billion over the next decade.
The Senate
Committee’s bill would also continue a flawed crop insurance program
that shares the same flaws. Again, it’s the biggest producers of
commodity crops that reap the benefits – in 2011, a single corporation
made over $2 million dollars through subsidies provided by the program.
Continuing crop insurance unchanged could cost taxpayers $39 billion
over the next five years.
The 2012 Farm Bill can take us down the
road to healthy foods, or it can perpetuate the imbalance that has
existed for too long. But at a time of high deficits and significant
cuts to important public interest priorities, it is unjustifiable to
continue spending billions of taxpayer dollars on subsidies that
underwrite the production of junk food ingredients and make our children
sick. As Congress works to reauthorize the Farm Bill, they’ll have to
decide whose side they’re on: ours, or Big Ag’s.
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