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What's at stake in the 2007 Farm BillOn the art and brutal economics of small-scale farming.Posted by Tom Philpott at 12:54 PM on 13 Apr 2006![]() Since moving to the North Carolina mountains in 2004 to launch a farm project, I've learned some sobering lessons about idyllic rural life. To wit, small-scale organic farming is an art form -- and as with most artistic endeavors, the hours are long and the pay is crap. How did I wind up penniless and exhausted, sporting a beat-up pair of Carhartts? You'd think I had set up shop as an abstract painter in some squalid, ruinously priced Williamsburg, Brooklyn, garret. (There's much to love about the farming life, too: for example, the volunteer broccoli raab that's sprouting up everywhere in one part of the garden, a triumph of unintentional permaculture. Saute it with a little olive oil, garlic, crushed chile, and vinegar, and you remember why you came to the farm in the first place.) The USDA's Economic Research Service recently released two reports on the state of farm economics. The information contained therein can help greens as they formulate an agenda for the 2007 Farm Bill (which may be even more important than defending biofuel and hybrids from critics.) The first one, Economic Well-Being of Farm Households (PDF), should be handed out at farmers markets and in CSA boxes everywhere. It's only four pages; here are some highlights:
The other report, "Growing Farm Size and the Distribution of Farm Payments" (PDF), offers its own shockers. To wit:
Note that the study's data set ends in 2003, thus not really accounting for the 2002 Farm Bill, signed into law by Bush, which has been churning out cash to big farms like a cow pumped full of Monsanto's growth hormones. What, then, are the implications for greens of the 2007 Farm Bill? If we accept the premise that small-scale organic ag, geared to a nearby market, is more environmentally responsible than Big Ag, then it's time to redirect federal farm policy. As things stand now, farm policy works toward bolstering the power of the large chemical-intensive farmers and their customers -- grain-buying giants like Archer Daniels Midland. There's no reason the Farm Bill couldn't be reformulated to support small-scale ag, though. I'll be laying out ideas for how that can happen here and in other publications over the coming months.
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