radman1
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2006
- Messages
- 3,016
- Location
- midwest
- Tractor
- JD 4520, Toolcat 5610, Bobcat S300, Case-IH 125 Pro, Case-IH 245, IH 1086, IH 806
Remember, that taxes are again paid on the farm subsidies, so some goes back to the goverment. The next proposed farm bill will decrease or eliminate payments to farmers who have farm incomes above a set limit. Currently, there is no set limit and it is proportional to the amount of land you have and previous crop production. Not to start a political war, but the amount of $$ spent in the Iraq war is vastly more that the farm subsidies program. I am not postive but I think the farm subsidy program is about 10 billion/year. The proposed request for the Iraqi war is 194 billion next year.
Some of the incomes mentioned are loans which are paid back by the farmer with interest.
I forgot to add, that subsidies are tied to crop prices. Prices for most crops were near all time lows in the past 5 years. Corn below $2 has nearly no profit. Most farmers were living on the subsidies. Low prices = more subsidies. Prices in 2007 have improved dramatically for wheat, corn and soybeans. Therefore, pay outs will be lower in 2007.
Some of the incomes mentioned are loans which are paid back by the farmer with interest.
I forgot to add, that subsidies are tied to crop prices. Prices for most crops were near all time lows in the past 5 years. Corn below $2 has nearly no profit. Most farmers were living on the subsidies. Low prices = more subsidies. Prices in 2007 have improved dramatically for wheat, corn and soybeans. Therefore, pay outs will be lower in 2007.