Farm Program Pays $1.3 Billion to People Who Don't Farm

1prophet

Diamond Member
Aug 17, 2005
5,313
534
126
Farm Program Pays $1.3 Billion to People Who Don't Farm


By Dan Morgan, Gilbert M. Gaul and Sarah Cohen
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, July 2, 2006; A01



EL CAMPO, Tex. -- Even though Donald R. Matthews put his sprawling new residence in the heart of rice country, he is no farmer. He is a 67-year-old asphalt contractor who wanted to build a dream house for his wife of 40 years.

Yet under a federal agriculture program approved by Congress, his 18-acre suburban lot receives about $1,300 in annual "direct payments," because years ago the land was used to grow rice.

Matthews is not alone. Nationwide, the federal government has paid at least $1.3 billion in subsidies for rice and other crops since 2000 to individuals who do no farming at all, according to an analysis of government records by The Washington Post.

Some of them collect hundreds of thousands of dollars without planting a seed. Mary Anna Hudson, 87, from the River Oaks neighborhood in Houston, has received $191,000 over the past decade. For Houston surgeon Jimmy Frank Howell, the total was $490,709.

"I don't agree with the government's policy," said Matthews, who wanted to give the money back but was told it would just go to other landowners. "They give all of this money to landowners who don't even farm, while real farmers can't afford to get started. It's wrong."

The checks to Matthews and other landowners were intended 10 years ago as a first step toward eventually eliminating costly, decades-old farm subsidies. Instead, the payments have grown into an even larger subsidy that benefits millionaire landowners, foreign speculators and absentee landlords, as well as farmers.

Most of the money goes to real farmers who grow crops on their land, but they are under no obligation to grow the crop being subsidized. They can switch to a different crop or raise cattle or even grow a stand of timber -- and still get the government payments. The cash comes with so few restrictions that subdivision developers who buy farmland advertise that homeowners can collect farm subsidies on their new back yards.

The payments now account for nearly half of the nation's expanding agricultural subsidy system, a complex web that has little basis in fairness or efficiency. What began in the 1930s as a limited safety net for working farmers has swollen into a far-flung infrastructure of entitlements that has cost $172 billion over the past decade. In 2005 alone, when pretax farm profits were at a near-record $72 billion, the federal government handed out more than $25 billion in aid, almost 50 percent more than the amount it pays to families receiving welfare.

The Post's nine-month investigation found farm subsidy programs that have become so all-encompassing and generous that they have taken much of the risk out of farming for the increasingly wealthy individuals who dominate it.

The farm payments have also altered the landscape and culture of the Farm Belt, pushing up land prices and favoring large, wealthy operators.

The system pays farmers a subsidy to protect against low prices even when they sell their crops at higher prices. It makes "emergency disaster payments" for crops that fail even as it provides subsidized insurance to protect against those failures.

And it pays people such as Matthews for merely owning land that was once farmed.

"We're simply administering it the way Congress established," said John A. Johnson, a top official at the U.S. Agriculture Department.

Today, even key farm-state figures believe the direct-payment program needs a major overhaul.

"This was an unintended consequence of the farm bill," said former representative Charles W. Stenholm, the west Texas Democrat who was once the ranking member on the House Agriculture Committee. "Instead of maintaining a rice industry in Texas, we basically contributed to its demise."

Freedom to Farm

The program that pays Matthews was the central feature of a landmark 1996 farm law that was meant to be a break with the farm handouts of the past. Subsidies began when the Roosevelt administration stepped forward to support millions of Depression-era farmers suffering from low prices. By the early 1990s, U.S. agriculture was a productive marvel, yet was still mired in government controls and awash in complex subsidies.

When the Republicans took control of Congress in 1995, they brought a new free-market philosophy toward farm policy. In a break with 60 years of farm protections, they promoted the idea that farmers should be allowed to grow crops without restrictions, standing or falling on their own. The result was the 1996 bill, which the Republicans called Freedom to Farm.

The idea was to finally remove government limits on planting and phase out subsidies. But GOP leaders had to make a trade-off to get the votes: They offered farmers annual fixed cash payments as a way of weaning them off subsidies.

That sweetener was needed to win over wheat-state Democrats -- led by Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (S.D.) -- and GOP House members from rice and cotton districts. Wheat growers alone stood to receive $1.4 billion in the first year. The payments for rice growers were increased by $52 million at the last minute in an effort to win support from Sen. David Pryor (D-Ark.).

The new payments were calculated on a farm's "base acres," or production dating to 1981. For example, if a farmer had planted 400 acres of rice, he was entitled to a check of about $100 an acre, or $40,000, every year. The amount per acre varied depending on past production.

The payments were unrestricted -- farmers got them whether or not they grew any crops, or whether prices were high or low.

Owners could do almost anything they wanted with their land, as long as they did not develop it. They could leave it fallow or rent it for pasture. They could set up a hunting retreat. Or, as happened in some Louisiana parishes, landowners could collect payments while planting stands of commercial timber.

Supporters said these annual payments gave farmers the flexibility to switch from one crop to another as market conditions changed, or even to sit it out in a year of low prices. In addition, the payments fit with international trade rules that frown on traditional price supports.

The annual payments were dubbed "transitional" and were supposed to decline over seven years. Many lawmakers assumed they would eventually end. But two years later, farm prices fell sharply, and the Republican-led Congress gave in to the farm lobby.

Sen. Thad Cochran (R-Miss.) used his power as chairman of the Appropriations subcommittee on agriculture to push through $3 billion in "emergency" assistance to grain, cotton and dairy farmers. That was only the beginning of a retreat by Republicans fearing retribution at the polls in key "red" states with broad farm constituencies.

"The original intent was to make a step in the direction of eliminating farm programs," said then-House Majority Leader Richard K. Armey (R-Tex.), who led an unsuccessful fight in the 1990s to trim the subsidies. "By 1998, there was no zeal left."

Instead of cutting, Congress ended up expanding the program, now known as direct and countercyclical payments. A program intended to cost $36 billion over seven years instead topped $54 billion.

"The farm policy we're pursuing now has no rhyme or reason, and we're just sending big checks to big farmers," said Gary Mitchell, now a family farmer in Kansas who was once a top aide to then-Rep. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.), the 1996 bill's House sponsor. "They're living off their welfare checks."

Efforts to overhaul the farm subsidy network have been repeatedly thwarted by powerful farm-state lawmakers in Congress allied with agricultural interests.

"The strength of the farm lobby in this town is really unbelievable," Armey said. "I don't think there's a smaller group of constituents that has a bigger influence."

'Cowboy Starter Kits'

Farmers and landowners benefited from the 1996 law whether their land once grew wheat, corn, cotton or any of the other subsidized crops. But nowhere is the impact more evident than in the sunbaked Texas rice country that spreads southwest from Houston to the Colorado River and east to the Gulf of Mexico.

In 1981, the Texas rice belt extended over about 600,000 acres. By last year, USDA records show, the amount of planted rice had shrunk to 202,000 acres, partly because landowners were able to get farm payments even if no rice was grown on their land.

In fact, so many landowners and farmers are collecting money on their former ricelands -- $37 million last year alone -- that the acres no longer used for rice outnumber the planted ones.

"So many wealthy people are getting so much money off this, it's going to be hard to cut," said Michael Wollam, a rice farmer from Brazoria County.

At a housing development rising from old rice fields on the outskirts of El Campo, 70 miles southwest of Houston, local real estate broker John K. Petty purchased a 75-acre tract from investors in July 2002. He held on to it for a few months, then carved it up and resold it for housing.

"At one time, the area was all farmed in rice," Petty said. Now, the dusty tract is perfect for what he calls "cowboy starter kits," residential tracts owned by nonfarmers but still large enough to keep a horse in the back yard.

Petty informed potential buyers that because their land had once been an active rice field, they could collect an annual payment from the USDA on the portion that was not developed. They did not have to grow rice or anything else.

"If you have 10 acres and build a house on one, you can continue to get farm payments on those other nine acres without farming," the USDA's Johnson said.

Petty used it as a selling point.

"Does it increase the marketability?" Petty asked. "Sure it does."

Duane Korenek bought 17 acres at the site and is building a house. Korenek said it was "common knowledge around here" that the new owners could collect farm payments. He has received about $2,550, USDA records show.

A few hundred yards up a gravel and dirt road, oilman Rene Hamman purchased 20 acres in May 2003. His two-story house and garage sit on part of the land and are appraised at $338,140, records show. His payments have been about $4,500, according to USDA records. "The money is free," Hamman, 48, said, adding that he thought the money should go to real farmers. "You don't have to do anything but keep the ground."

When Donald Matthews bought his 18-acre tract from Petty in 2002, he never expected to receive farm subsidies on his property, appraised at $381,000.

"I was informed by Mr. Petty that there was a 'rice base' and I was entitled. I said, 'What do you mean I'm entitled? I'm not going to farm rice.' "

But nine of Matthews's acres are classified as agricultural land, for which he has received more than $5,000, records show.

Matthews said he originally was not going to take the money. But he said Petty told him that it would just go to other landowners. "I thought, heck, why should I do that? I wasn't going to give it to somebody else to put in their pocket." Instead, he uses the money to fund scholarships at the county fair and two local high schools, he said.

"Still, I get money I don't think I'm entitled to," he said.

In some Texas counties, the federal payments open the door to another benefit: property tax reductions.

"When a property owner receives a federal payment, the land is considered agricultural use and is assessed at that lower rate," explained Tylene Gamble, the chief appraiser for Wharton County, where El Campo is located. The discount can be dramatic. For example, she said, a parcel might be assessed at $55 an acre for agricultural use but $3,000 for regular use. "It's big," Gamble said.

Gamble is trying to enforce local rules that require landowners to actually farm to qualify for the lower tax rate. But she is hampered by the federal government's definition of farming, "which does not require you to actually farm. There is a conflict there between the federal definition and our definition," she said.

Gary Underwood, director of agricultural appraisals for sprawling Harris County, which includes Houston, said owners are building $500,000 houses on old rice fields and qualifying for tax breaks.

He singled out one tract where the owner built a 4,000-square-foot single-story house on five acres in Katy, a booming suburb. The house sits on one acre. The other four acres get a tax break and a farm payment. "I can't touch him," Underwood said.

The Big Landowners

The large landowners who control vast sections of the once-sprawling rice fields outside Houston have been some of the biggest beneficiaries of the 1996 law, USDA records show.

Diana Morton Hudson is a corporate securities lawyer whose 87-year-old mother, Mary Anna Hudson, owns an interest in two tracts of land in nearby Matagorda County. USDA records show that Mary Anna Hudson has received $191,000 since 1997 on land she doesn't farm. "We just pay someone to mow it, and it just sits there," Diana Hudson said.

Later, she added: "I'm a corporate securities lawyer. I couldn't even locate these two parcels in Matagorda."

Houston heart surgeon Jimmy Frank Howell has received $490,709 since 1996 in payments tied to old rice tracts on a vast ranch near Raywood in Liberty County where he now raises cattle, USDA records show. The last rice produced on the 10,000-acre property was "probably over 10 years ago," according to Susan Cotton, Howell's business manager. "We're not rice producers anymore."

For Guy F. Stovall III, an El Campo banker who helps oversee thousands of acres of family lands in Wharton, Matagorda and Jackson counties, the 1996 farm law was a chance to get out of rice farming and convert properties inherited from his grandparents to other uses.

But 10 years later, taxpayers are still paying for the transition. Records show the land owned by Stovall and two trusts set up by his grandparents have generated $1.8 million in rice subsidies since 1996.

Stovall stopped growing rice and began renting the land for grazing cattle. The family continues to grow some crops, such as sorghum and soybeans.

Stovall said that is exactly the kind of transition Congress intended with Freedom to Farm. He estimates that 50 to 60 percent of his government payments go to soil, water and other improvements, such as filling in irrigation ditches and putting up fences.

"There are bullfrogs where there were none, and we're starting to see quail," he said. "There are less chemicals flowing into our bays, and it reminds me of the environment when I was a kid."

'Hell of a Deal'

Among the most fervent critics of the annual payments are hundreds of Texas farmers who rent land on which they grow rice. Under the rules, tenants receive the money if they operate the farms. But landlords can simply increase rents to capture those payments.

Other landlords have evicted the tenants from land they had farmed for years. Then the landowners can collect the checks themselves, even if they do not farm.

Congress "made slaves out of every farmer who was a tenant," said Stephen J. Zapalac, a former Matagorda County rice farmer who now runs a farm credit office in Bay City.

In 1998, Zapalac was leasing 2,500 acres, most of it for rice farming. One landlord canceled a lease for 1,400 acres in 1998, he said, and a second cancellation followed for the rest in 2004.

"As soon as they figured they could take the payments, they said, 'I don't need you anymore,' " he said. "They were renting me land for $40 an acre, but they could get $125 an acre from the government."

Some of the rice land he lost has been turned into pasture for cattle, while the landlord continues to receive the rice money.

"You can sell the calves and still stick the rice payment in your pocket," Zapalac said. "It's a hell of a deal."

For years, Rex Bailey III, a rugged 6-foot-5 rice farmer, sharecropped near Angleton, Tex., an arrangement in which he and his landlord divided the costs and shared in profits and government payments.

"It was all based on what was produced," he said. "We shared the risk."

That changed in 2002, when the owners of one tract changed their arrangement with Bailey, 55, from sharecropping to a fixed annual rent, pegged to capture the $90 an acre that the government was paying him on 214 acres.

"A lot of landlords increased their rental rates to equal or exceed the direct payments," Bailey said. "They know what the payment is, so that's what the rent is. Even though the payment is in my name, I turn around and give it to" the owner.

In 2004, the property was sold to Shin Shan Chu, an elderly investor who lives in Vancouver, Canada. Once a year, Bailey, who still grows rice on part of the 4,000 acres, cuts a $25,000 check and sends it to Chu, whom he has never met.

Reached by telephone, Chu said he hoped to eventually "develop some residential buildings there. It's very nice land, very flat, very close to the city."

Chu, who also owns and leases 17,000 acres of farmland in west Texas, grew up in mainland China and Taiwan, worked in electronics and moved to Vancouver 36 years ago. He described himself as nearly 80.

"It's just an investment," he said of his farm holdings. "I'm waiting for the money."

Researchers Alice Crites and Don Pohlman contributed to this report.



And here I thought farm subsidies were to only be used to promote farming and help the farmers who actually plant crops or raise livestock
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Excuse me, but aren't these more of those "red staters" collecting "welfare" while they complain about the non-existent "blue staters" collecting welfare?

Yep. That's them alright.

 

bamacre

Lifer
Jul 1, 2004
21,029
2
61
Originally posted by: BBond
Excuse me, but aren't these more of those "red staters" collecting "welfare" while they complain about the non-existent "blue staters" collecting welfare?

Yep. That's them alright.

No ******. This kinda crap didn't go on during Clinton's years. :roll:
 

Puffnstuff

Lifer
Mar 9, 2005
16,187
4,871
136
The same kind of program should be used for congress. Let them stay at home and not do anything so they don't mess up anything else.:)
 

Strk

Lifer
Nov 23, 2003
10,197
4
76
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: BBond
Excuse me, but aren't these more of those "red staters" collecting "welfare" while they complain about the non-existent "blue staters" collecting welfare?

Yep. That's them alright.

No ******. This kinda crap didn't go on during Clinton's years. :roll:

They were lower.....
 

EagleKeeper

Discussion Club Moderator<br>Elite Member
Staff member
Oct 30, 2000
42,589
5
0
This has been going on for over 50 years.

Tobacco payments go to universities also.
 

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
13,136
1
0
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: BBond
Excuse me, but aren't these more of those "red staters" collecting "welfare" while they complain about the non-existent "blue staters" collecting welfare?

Yep. That's them alright.

No ******. This kinda crap didn't go on during Clinton's years. :roll:

Did anyone say it wasn't? For f**ks sake, quit it with the lame "ButClinton" excuses already. If it's wrong it's wrong, and this is clearly welfare for rural Texans. The government may as well just throw that cash down a hole for as good as it's doing this country.
 

JEDIYoda

Lifer
Jul 13, 2005
33,986
3,320
126
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: BBond
Excuse me, but aren't these more of those "red staters" collecting "welfare" while they complain about the non-existent "blue staters" collecting welfare?

Yep. That's them alright.

No ******. This kinda crap didn't go on during Clinton's years. :roll:

wake up dude and smell the roses....alot worse crap besides this sort of stuff did go on when Clinton was in Office..or should we say Hillary??
 

the Chase

Golden Member
Sep 22, 2005
1,403
0
0
Another socialist program gone astray, not letting Capitalism work it's magic. If they would have just let half of the farmers go out of business way back when.....But no.....Gotta prop up those wheat/rice/corn prices....
 

bamacre

Lifer
Jul 1, 2004
21,029
2
61
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: BBond
Excuse me, but aren't these more of those "red staters" collecting "welfare" while they complain about the non-existent "blue staters" collecting welfare?

Yep. That's them alright.

No ******. This kinda crap didn't go on during Clinton's years. :roll:

Did anyone say it wasn't? For f**ks sake, quit it with the lame "ButClinton" excuses already. If it's wrong it's wrong, and this is clearly welfare for rural Texans. The government may as well just throw that cash down a hole for as good as it's doing this country.

:laugh:

I wasn't excusing anything. Just pointing out that this kind of corruption is not limited to Republicans. If you bothered to look at the post I was replying to, you may have seen this. It didn't really have anything to do with Clinton, he just happens to be the last D who held office.

 

alien42

Lifer
Nov 28, 2004
12,810
3,216
136
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: BBond
Excuse me, but aren't these more of those "red staters" collecting "welfare" while they complain about the non-existent "blue staters" collecting welfare?

Yep. That's them alright.

No ******. This kinda crap didn't go on during Clinton's years. :roll:

maybe if the republicans would take responsibility for and admit their mistakes then screw ups like this could be fixed. that is one serious issue with the far right side is that they are unable to say "we made a mistake" and instead let the problem snowball. when a democrat does this they are accused of "flip flopping" which is apparently a cardinal sin to the republicans.
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Originally posted by: JEDIYoda
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: BBond
Excuse me, but aren't these more of those "red staters" collecting "welfare" while they complain about the non-existent "blue staters" collecting welfare?

Yep. That's them alright.

No ******. This kinda crap didn't go on during Clinton's years. :roll:

wake up dude and smell the roses....alot worse crap besides this sort of stuff did go on when Clinton was in Office..or should we say Hillary??

First off, if you have some evidence of "alot worse crap" that went on fell free to post it and not just post the usual ludicrous right wing nonsense. Secondly, when Clinton was in office at least SOME of the money went to family farms. Now that bush and his corporate buddies have cornered the market on food production (as well as energy, communication, and a few others) our taxpayer dollars are going to the likes of Archer Daniels Midland, Cargill, and Monsanto.
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Oh, and just in case you don't believe me, here are some figures FROM 2001, the year bushler stole the White House, to back up my claims. Where is your information to back up yours?

PS It's from The Heritage Foundation so you don't get to use the usual specious right wing claim of "liberal bias".

Still at the Federal Trough: Farm Subsidies for the Rich and Famous Shattered Records in 2001

Members of Congress who are poised to spend at least $171 billion on direct farm subsidies over the next decade would be wise to examine newly released statistics detailing who actually receives these subsidies. In 2001, Fortune 500 companies and large agribusinesses shattered previous farm subsidy records, while small family farmers saw their share of the subsidy pie shrink.

These subsidy programs tax working Americans to award millions to millionaires and provide profitable corporate farms with money that has been used to buy out family farms. The current farm bills1 would provide even greater subsidies for large farmers, costing the average household $4,400 over the next 10 years, while facilitating increased consolidation and buyouts in the agricultural industry.2
How Farm Subsidies Target Large Farms

Legislators promoting subsidies take advantage of the popular misconception that farm subsidies exist to stabilize the incomes of poor family farmers who are at the mercy of unpredictable weather and crop prices. If that were the case, the federal government could bring the income of every full-time farmer in America up to 185 percent of the federal poverty level ($32,652 for a family of four in 2001) for just $4 billion per year.3 In reality, however, the government spends nearly $20 billion annually on programs that target large farms and agribusinesses.

Eligibility for farm subsidies is determined not by income or poverty standards but by the crop that is grown. Growers of corn, wheat, cotton, soybeans, and rice receive more than 90 percent of all farm subsidies, while growers of most of the 400 other domestic crops are completely shut out of farm subsidy programs. Further skewing these awards, the amounts of subsidies increase as a farmer plants more crops.

Thus, large farms and agribusinesses--which not only have the most acres of land, but also, because of their economies of scale, happen to be the nation's most profitable farms--receive the largest subsidies. Meanwhile, family farmers with few acres receive little or nothing in subsidies. In other words, far from serving as a safety net for poor farmers, farm subsidies comprise America's largest corporate welfare program.

With agricultural programs designed to target large and profitable farms rather than family farmers, it should come as no surprise that farm subsidies in 2001were distributed overwhelmingly to large growers and agribusiness, including a number of Fortune 500 companies. Charts 1 and 2 show that the top 10 percent of recipients--most of whom earn over $250,000 annually--received 73 percent of all farm subsidies in 2001.4 This figure represents an increase above the 67 percent of all farm subsidies that they received between 1996 and 2000. The next 10 percent of recipients saw their percentage of farm subsidies fall slightly from 17 percent between 1996 and 2000 to 15 percent in 2001.

The main losers in 2001 were the bottom 80 percent of farm subsidy recipients, including most family farmers, who saw their collective share of the subsidy pie shrink from 16 percent throughout the previous five years to 12 percent in 2001. This represents a decline of 25 percent in the share of subsidies received by these farmers.

At the same time, Chart 3 shows that the number of farms receiving over $1 million in farm subsidies in one year increased by 28 percent to a record 69 farms in 2001. Topping the list was Arkansas' Tyler Farms, whose $8.1 million bounty was 90,000 times more than the median farm subsidy of $899--and nearly equal to the total of farm subsidies distributed to all farmers in Massachusetts and Rhode Island combined.

Why Farm Subsidies Will Continue to Target Large Farms

Although farm subsidies have targeted large farms for decades, the evolution of farm subsidies into a corporate welfare program has accelerated in recent years for two reasons:

* Congress has siphoned record amounts of money into farm subsidies since 1998; and
* Farm subsidies have helped large corporate farms buy out small farms and further consolidate the industry.

Despite an attempt to phase out farm programs in 1996, Congress reacted to slight crop price decreases in 1998 by initiating the first of four annual "emergency" payments to farmers. Subsidies increased from $6 billion in 1996 to nearly $30 billion in 2000 even though farmers have substantially higher incomes and net worths than the national average. Predictably, as subsidies increased, the amounts of subsidies for large farms and agribusinesses also increased.

Although increased subsidies help explain why large farms are receiving more money, however, they do not explain why they are receiving a larger portion of the overall farm subsidy pie. Since 1991, subsidies for large farms have nearly tripled, but there have been no increases in subsidies for small farms.6 Large farms are grabbing all of the new subsidy dollars from small farms because the federal government is helping them buy out small farms. Specifically, large farms are using their massive federal subsidies to purchase small farms and consolidate the agriculture industry. As they buy up smaller farms, not only are these large farms able to capitalize further on economies of scale and become more profitable, but they also become eligible for even more federal subsidies--which they can use to buy even more small farms.

The result is a "plantation effect" that has already affected America's rice farms, three-quarters of which have been bought out and converted into tenant farms.7 Other farms growing wheat, corn, cotton, and soybeans are tending in the same direction. Consolidation is the main reason that the number of farms has decreased from 7 million to 2 million (just 400,000 of which are full-time farms) since 1935, while the average farm size has increased from 150 acres to more than 500 acres over the same period.8

This farm industry consolidation is not necessarily harmful. Many larger farms and agribusinesses are more efficient, have better technology, and can produce crops at a lower cost than traditional farms; and not all family farmers who sell their property to corporate farms do so reluctantly.

The issue of concern is not consolidation per se, but whether the federal government should continue to subsidize these purchases through farm subsidies and whether multimillion-dollar agricultural corporations should continue to receive welfare payments. When President Franklin Roosevelt first crafted farm subsidies to aid family farmers struggling through the Great Depression, he clearly did not envision a situation in which these subsidies would be shifted to large Fortune 500 companies operating with 21st century technology in a booming economy.
Millions for Millionaires

A glance at some of the recipients of farm subsidies in 2001 shows that many of those receiving these subsidies clearly do not need them. Table 1 shows that 12 Fortune 500 companies received farm subsidies in 2001. Subsidies to the four largest of these recipients--Westvaco, Chevron, John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance, and Caterpillar--shattered their previous record highs.

Table 2 lists other rich and famous "farmers" who received massive farm subsidies in 2001. David Rockefeller, the former chairman of Chase Manhattan and grandson of oil tycoon John D. Rockefeller, for example, received a personal record high of $134,556. Portland Trailblazers basketball star Scottie Pippen received his annual $26,315 payment not to farm land he owns in Arkansas. Ted Turner, the 25th wealthiest man in America, received $12,925. Even ousted Enron CEO and multi-millionaire Kenneth Lay received $6,019 for not farming his land. Chart 4 shows how these amounts tower over the amount received by the median farm subsidy recipient, who has received just $899 per year since 1996.

Conclusion

The farm bills currently being considered by a House-Senate conference committee would further accelerate the transformation of farm subsidies into corporate welfare programs. Most of their enormous $171 billion cost would subsidize highly profitable Fortune 500 companies, agribusinesses, and celebrity "hobby farmers" and help fund their purchases of small family farms, and the average American family would be left paying $4,400 in taxes and inflated food prices to benefit millionaires--unless Congress or President George W. Bush finally puts an end to this counterproductive waste of taxpayer dollars.
 

ayabe

Diamond Member
Aug 10, 2005
7,449
0
0
Originally posted by: JEDIYoda
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: BBond
Excuse me, but aren't these more of those "red staters" collecting "welfare" while they complain about the non-existent "blue staters" collecting welfare?

Yep. That's them alright.

No ******. This kinda crap didn't go on during Clinton's years. :roll:

wake up dude and smell the roses....alot worse crap besides this sort of stuff did go on when Clinton was in Office..or should we say Hillary??


Yeah like BJ's.

Sorry to burst your bubble but W's collective corruption is orders of magnitude worse than anything Clinton ever did.