Efforts to pass a new farm bill have stalled in the U.S. Senate for
the past two weeks over procedural disagreements between Republican and
Democratic party leaders, raising the prospect that enactment will be
delayed until next year.
Senior advisers to President George Bush complicated the
congressional negotiation last week with a broad threat to veto the
legislation if it were to increase taxes, expand agricultural trade with
Cuba and raise farm supports for a number of commodities including milk
and sugar.
Sugar provisions in the bill approved by the Senate Agriculture
Committee's last month "would dramatically increase the cost
of the program," the White House said in a statement. "The
Administration strongly opposes these changes to the sugar
program."
It also objected that the bill would increase the payment rate for
the Milk Income Loss Contract (MILC) program and increase the quantity
of milk that is eligible to receive MILC payments. "These increases
likewise do not signify reform, result in more market distorting policy,
and increase government costs," it said.
However, the National Milk Producers' Federation (NMPF)
supports the bill's revised dairy price support program. After the
first year of the five-year bill, the Senate version of the Farm Bill
raises the MILC payment rate from 34% to 45% of the difference between
$16.94/100 lbs, and the monthly Class I milk price in Boston (which was
the original payment when the MILC was created in 2001). It also raises
the annual milk volume qualifying for MILC payments, from 2.4 million
lbs to 4.1m lbs after the first year.
Meanwhile, International Dairy Foods Association said it was
disappointed with the higher payment rate and increased volume of milk
production eligible for MILC payments and expressed concern with a
requirement for daily mandatory dairy product price reporting as
"unnecessary and unduly burdensome."
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