In Current Budget Environment, Agriculture Has Good Story to Tell Print
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                CONTACT:   Phillip Hayes
Monday, August 1, 2011                            202-271-5734 (cell)

From the International Sweetener Symposium:
In Current Budget Environment, Agriculture Has Good Story to Tell

STOWE, Vt.¾ Farm policy is not a sacred cow, but it also shouldn’t be a scapegoat during ongoing debt ceiling discussions, Congressman Mike Conaway (R-Texas) told the 28th International Sweetener Symposium today via videoconference.

“You can cut agriculture all day long and twice on Sunday and it won’t move the needle on debt and deficits,” he explained.  “Washington cannot balance its books on a policy that makes up just one-quarter of 1 percent of the total federal budget.”

Conaway, who chairs the House Agriculture Subcommittee on General Farm Commodities and Risk Management, said that producers should expect to see tighter budgets.  But, he said, he and many other lawmakers firmly believe that agriculture should not be singled out, that any savings should be proportionate to agriculture’s impact on the federal budget, and that the Agriculture Committees should determine how any savings are achieved.

“Agriculture has been singled out for $15 billion in cuts over the past six years while the rest of government continued to grow,” he noted.  “This happened even though farm policy over the past decade has operated, not only within its budget, but well under budget.”

Conaway continued: “Name another policy in Washington that can say that.  Farm policy has a great story to tell as we head into a process that is going to involve some very difficult budget decisions.”

Sugar policy, he said, “has it own good story to tell” because it operates at no cost to taxpayers and has helped ensure adequate and affordable supplies.  These successes, according to Conaway, bode well for the policy’s continuation into the future.

“We are very blessed in this country to have our own food and fiber supply,” he concluded.  “We are safer and more secure because of it.  Our economy is stronger because of it.  And, we have more jobs because of agriculture.  Agriculture is the one bright spot in an otherwise grim economic picture.  We shouldn’t take it for granted, and we certainly shouldn’t gamble with it.  We need good farm policy.”
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For more information about the International Sweetener Symposium, visit www.sugaralliance.org
Symposium audio files can be downloaded at www.ASAradio.org
 

Symposium

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