Thompson Continues to Take Key Steps Ahead of May 23 New Farm Bill Markup
CPI report | Fed speakers | House farm bill details, briefings | Biden to act on China


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Washington Focus


 

The House and Senate are in session Tuesday through Friday.

Continued focus on the new farm bill will continue this week with additional briefings about the House farm bill proposals. The Ag Committee on Friday released a more extensive summary of key titles of the farm bill.

      House Ag Committee Chairman GT Thompson (R-Pa.) on Friday released a more detailed, title-by-title overview of his farm bill proposals.

     Links:

     The farmer-friendly House version includes many key provisions, such as:

     While the exact reference prices in Thompson’s plan aren’t public, a 10-20% increase for all commodities is clearly superior to Senate Ag Chair Debbie Stabenow’s (D-Mich.) proposal to only raise cotton, rice, and peanuts by 5%. Stabenow’s section-by-section alludes to some revisions to the effective reference price formula but is short on details. Thompson appears to not change the effective reference price formula, however the boost in statutory reference prices will increase the ERP cap, allowing it to provide more protection at the start of a downturn.

      There is enough information available to make a comparison on Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) changes in the two plans. Stabenow proposes to raise the ARC guarantee to 88% of benchmark revenue and appears to leave the payment band alone at 10%. Meanwhile, Thompson boosts the guarantee to 90% of benchmark revenue and expands the payment band to 12.5%.

     In a real-world example using projected prices from CBO, here is how the two bills stack up in Carroll county Illinois, assuming no fluctuations in yield.

     Illinois – Carroll County

     Olympic average yield = 230.30 bu./acre

     Olympic average price = $5.13/bu.

     Actual Yield = 230.30 bu./acre

     Projected 2025 MYAP = $4.20/bu.

     FBC

     Of note: Last week, Rep. Angie Craig (D-Minn.) was quoted by Politico saying, “I will say that certainly, Senator Stabenow’s bill looks a lot more like the priorities of a Midwestern representative.” As more details emerge, the congresswoman might want to rethink that assertion. Thompson’s bill certainly appears to put the “farm” back in the farm bill and gives a meaningful boost in the safety net for all commodities, versus just a select few. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist, or especially a lawmaker up for re-election, to guess which proposal Minnesota farmers will prefer.

     What’s next: Thompson plans to publish the full legislative text soon, before the May 23 markup. “The chairman’s mark is near finalized” and will bolster the farm safety net while avoiding “indiscriminate expansion of our nutrition safety net,” Thompson wrote in an open letter accompanying the summary. We continue to await release of CBO scoring of House and Senate farm bill proposals… those will provide additional insight into analyzing which bills are truly reflective of production agriculture.

— On China, Biden is preparing to extend and increase Trump's tariffs on some $300 billion in Chinese goods, with an announcement expected Tuesday.

     The president wants to triple tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminum. He also aims to dramatically raise tariffs on clean-energy goods — quadrupling those fees on Chinese electric vehicles, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

— On border issues, President Biden s preparing an executive order to try to stem illegal border crossings. He will rely on the same section of the Federal Code, known as 212(f), that Trump used to slow immigration and impose a so-called Muslim ban.

 

 


Other Events & Hearings 


 

Monday, May 13

 

Tuesday, May 14

Wednesday, May 15

 

Thursday, May 16

 

Friday, May 17


Economic Reports and Events for the Week



Inflation data will be the focus this week on the economic front with the Consumer Price Index (CPI) data on Wednesday and the PPI-FD data on Tuesday. With the Fed noting inflation as a key ahead, traders will key off consumer-level data and whether or not the info shows easing from the level seen in March Retail Sales figures are also coming and that will provide more information on consumers along with initial housing data, regional manufacturing readings and small business attitudes.

Monday, May 6

Tuesday, May 7

Wednesday, May 8

Thursday, May 9

Friday, May 10


Key USDA & international Ag & Energy Reports and Events 



The ag sector will continue to focus on South American production and new-crop prospects in the United States.

Monday, May 6

     Ag reports and events:

Energy reports and events:

Tuesday, May 7

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:

Wednesday, May 8

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:

Thursday, May 9

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:

Friday, May 10

     Ag reports and events:

     Energy reports and events:


 

KEY LINKS


WASDE | Crop Production | USDA weekly reports | Crop Progress | Food prices | Farm income | Export Sales weekly | ERP dashboard | California phase-out of gas-powered vehicles | RFS | IRA: Biofuels | IRA: Ag | | Russia/Ukraine war, lessons learned | | SCOTUS on WOTUS | SCOTUS on Prop 12 pork | New farm bill primer | | Gov’t payments to farmers by program | Farmer working capital | USDA Ag Outlook Forum |