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Export, Die, or Subsidize: The International Political Economy of American Agriculture, 1875–1940
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2009
Extract
The agricultural policies of the New Deal persist to the present day and are a particularly important turning point in the history of the American farm sector. In the period from 1875 to 1940, agricultural policy evolved from a strategy of exporting the domestic surplus, to shrinking production through attrition in the farm population, to subsidizing production and restricting acreage. Although rooted in farm demands upon the political process, this evolution was ultimately driven by both foreign demand and the alternative employment opportunities available to American farmers.
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- The United States in the International Economy
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- Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1989
References
Earlier drafts of this paper were presented at the 27th Annual Convention of the International Studies Association, 25–29 March 1986, Anaheim, CA; and the 1986 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, 28–31 August, Washington, D.C. I am grateful to David Balaam, Jeffry Frieden, Jeffrey Hart, Wendy K. Lake, Karen Orren, Robert Paarlberg, and Michael Wallerstein for comments. I would also like to acknowledge the research assistance of Scott James and Bess Karadenes and the financial support of the Academic Senate of UCLA.
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4 In the absence of artificial restraints, supply cannot exceed demand; if supply increases more rapidly than demand, prices will simply decline. By oversupply or surplus, I mean that supply is too large relative to domestic demand to sustain a price that makes farming profitable under current factor endowments and technology. The condition of oversupply in the United States was originally generated by many factors, including strong foreign demand for United States products as well as the perceived attractiveness of farm life.
5 There is a natural tendency for the farm population to decline as countries industrialize. As cities and manufacturing sectors grow, labor is attracted away from agriculture. Simultaneously, the remaining farmers may begin to employ more intensive agricultural techniques, thereby increasing their productivity. Up to a point, this process is self-generating; shrinkage induces improvements in productivity, which, in turn, displace additional farmers.
6 The process of shrinking output through population attrition clearly has differential effects within the farm sector. For the remaining more efficient and more competitive farmers, the agricultural surplus will be smaller and incomes, for them, correspondingly higher. For these lucky farmers, this is a route to relative prosperity. There are considerable private and social costs—related to the state of the macroeconomy—for the farmers who are dislocated. If alternative means of employment for these farmers are scarce, their incomes may fall dramatically. In addition, while the incomes of the remaining farmers will be enhanced, the income of the agricultural sector as a whole may actually be reduced.
7 To succeed, production controls must be mandatory. Under typical conditions, farmers will not voluntarily agree to restrict production to reduce surpluses. Voluntary restrictions confront a classic large-n prisoners' dilemma: each fanner prefers to maintain production, while others reduce theirs, even though all farmers would gain from cooperation. As a single farmer's cutbacks cannot appreciably affect the surplus, while reducing output, if others do not, can spell bankruptcy, the temptation to defect is overwhelming. If a farmer believes others are reducing their production, he will increase his own. Thus, mandatory restrictions are necessary to impose cooperation. Even here, the incentives to cheat are high. Farmers therefore require minimum price supports or direct cash subsidies, which act as a form of income insurance against cheaters, as the price of their compliance with mandatory crop restraints. Subsidies and mandatory production restraints, then, are mutually reinforcing. Restraints are necessary to limit payments to farmers; subsidies are required to gain farm compliance with reduced productions levels.
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47 Ibid., see also Peterson Agricultural Experts.
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