| Farm Bill and
the Environment
The Center co-sponsored a two-day research workshop on June 28-29, 2001, at the Phoenix Park Hotel in Washington, D.C.,
focusing on the Farm Bill and the environment. Sponsors included: the University of California's
Giannini Foundation, Iowa State University's Center for Agriculture and Rural Development, Kansas
State University, and the Henry A. Wallace Center for Agricultural and Environmental Policy. The
purpose of the workshop was to help frame the debate on policy options that base agricultural
program funding on conservation and environmental objectives. Rather than answering the question
of what the public wants, it sought to answer questions of how to effectively provide it. The
audience included policy makers, policy advisors, representatives of commodity and conservation
groups, and Congressional staff. Speakers included leading academic scientists and economists,
policy makers, and their practitioners. Attendance was limited to engender frank and engaged
discussion among speakers and guests.
The first day of
the meeting focused on conceptual scientific and economic issues and was intended primarily for
the technical expert and resource person. The second day addressed primarily questions of
policy design and implementation. The workshop agenda is included
here.
Background on the Farm Bill
Low prices of
agricultural commodities from 1998 to the present have led to massive increases in federal
financial support to agriculture that were not anticipated in the 1996 Farm Bill. Indications
are that the federal government will continue to provide some form of financial safety net for
the agricultural sector. The challenge to reauthorizing the farm programs that expire in 2002
is to develop and implement policies that provide maximum benefit to the nation. This is
increasingly critical as the role of agriculture in the provision of environmental
quality—both positive and negative--becomes evident.
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