Cookiely wrote:Regit wrote:Farm subsidies are complicated, but it's all economical. It's partly redistributive to benefit working farmers (though wealthy farm owners also benefit), and it also helps keep food prices down. In the US it also helps domestic farmers compete with their international counterparts.
In the case of paying not to plant crops, it's just the government's attempt to control the market and prevent flooding.
Let me see if I understand this. If say the farmers have a gazillion bushels of corn, the price of corn would go down, and the farmers wouldn't make as much money? So they pay them not to plant to keep the price of the corn up? Why can't they instead pay a subsidy to the farmers for the corn and give it to starving people overseas?
The amount of food we give to starving people overseas is very significant. There is also a strong school of thought which views this as bad. It certainly harms third world farmers and leads to a cycle of dependency. When your workers are doing nothing more than snatching bags of USAID grains off of the conveyor belt there is a deeper problem than malnutrition affecting that place.
But the reason why we pay people to not plant corn instead of just sending their food away and paying them is because markets are global. You'd still be putting a ton of commodity into the world, lowering the price.
Frankly I am against subsidies since the family farm died years ago. US subsidies and the European CAP do create a lot of ill will among the third world countries, and cost significant amounts of money. There is a strong political lobby in favor of them remaining both in the US and then in the European case, France. The EU spends roughly 1/3 of their budget on the Common Agricultural Policy.