Doug Padgett
Doug Padgett
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Is it really the case that the subsidies are higher depending on the use the grain is put to? I didn't know that. Also, is rice used to feed cattle?
Sorry, I was a bit unclear. Rice is not used for feed much in the U.S. but does receive a large subsidy--along with wheat and cotton (the byproducts of which are used in feed and oil). But I think the answer to your question--at least in the aggregate--is yes.
Corn receives the largest dollar amount over all because it's used in so many ways--ethanol, HFCS, feed. The programs are apparently enormously complicated, but they provide direct payments to growers under various bills, as well as a price floor. Because need is not a factor, my understanding is that larger farms receive substantial amounts in direct payments; many small farms receive very little or none.
Regardless, as I said, I agree that subsidies are only one part of the issue. Four meatpackers do most of the slaughtering and fattening in this country. A handful of companies process most of the grain. The price pressures are pretty great all around.