Introduction
A farmer in Ohio cultivates to control weeds in his soybean field. Congress approved and President Bush signed an election-year farm bill this month that will pour billions of dollars in subsidies into Midwestern and Southern states that are political battlegrounds for lawmakers in both parties. (USDA Photo/Keith Weller)
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Scrapping efforts to move U.S. agriculture toward the free market, Congress just passed and President Bush signed into law a $249 billion measure substantially increasing farm programs over the next 10 years, including $90 billion in susidies. Supporters say subsidies help keep farmers solvent when crops fail or prices plummet. Critics contend subsidies overwhelmingly go to large agricultural operations, interfere with the free market and encourage farmers to overproduce subsidized crops. Bush initially wanted to redirect some subsidy money toward conservation programs. But political reality forced him to support the bill: In this fall's midterm congressional elections, several key Senate races are in farm states, and Republicans want to regain control of the Senate. Plus, Bush will need support in the heartland if he runs for re-election in 2004.
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May 17, 2002 |
Farm Subsidies |
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Apr. 11, 1986 |
Farm Finance |
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Sep. 03, 1941 |
Government Payments to Farmers |
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May 27, 1940 |
Government Farm Loans |
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Dec. 12, 1936 |
Government Aid to Farm Tenants |
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Mar. 20, 1935 |
Farm Tenancy in the United States |
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Dec. 08, 1932 |
Plans for Crop Surplus Control and Farm Mortgage Relief |
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Jul. 25, 1932 |
The Burden of Farm Mortgage Debt |
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Mar. 20, 1929 |
Plans of Farm Relief |
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Apr. 21, 1928 |
The Economic Position of the Farmer |
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Oct. 20, 1927 |
The Federal Farm Loan System |
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May 03, 1926 |
Congress and the Farm Problem |
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May 21, 1924 |
Agricultural Distress and Proposed Relief Measures |
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