Biden taking on Big Agriculture with program to help small family farms

PRESIDENT JOE Biden鈥檚 sweeping聽聽promoting competition across American industries aims to give a boost to farmers whose profits have dwindled as multinational companies increasingly dominate markets for crops, chemicals, seeds and meat.
Biden鈥檚 order includes directives on issues long pushed by some farm groups, such as rules that would help chicken farmers and ranchers win claims against poultry and meat packers, and better-defined 鈥淧roduct of the USA鈥 labels. It also encourages regulators to limit equipment makers鈥 ability to restrict farmers from repairing their own tractors.
The order comes amid increasing聽聽on lawmakers to level the playing field in agricultural markets. The US industry is heavily concentrated, with four companies controlling the world鈥檚 seeds while poultry and beef are similarly consolidated. The disparity came into focus in the coronavirus outbreak last year, when thousands of workers at meat plants caught the virus. Plants closed, sending meat prices surging while hog and cattle prices tumbled.
For farmers, market concentration 鈥渕eans they get less when they sell their produce and meat 鈥 even as prices rise at the grocery store,鈥 the order on Friday stated.
Rules with similar goals as some described in the order were proposed under President Obama, whose Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack now serves under Biden.
MAKING THE CASE
Among the final actions of the Obama administration were new rules making it easier for farmers and ranchers to sue the companies for anti-competitive behavior under the聽, measures that were strongly opposed by the meat industry.
Under Obama, Vilsack and Congress couldn鈥檛 make the case that antitrust reforms would boost economic growth and encourage entrepreneurs in rural America, according to Christopher Leonard, who wrote about the efforts to reform the industry in his book The Meat Racket.
鈥淭his time seems to be different,鈥 Leonard said in a message. 鈥淭here is a groundswell of support for antitrust reforms on both the left and right in Congress. If a program like this could ever get implemented, it seems like now is the best time in the past 20 years.鈥
罢丑别听, representing 1.3 million workers in the food,聽healthcare聽and pharmacy industries, said the order was a 鈥渟trong step to support American workers.鈥
In an e-mailed statement on Friday, Rob Larew of the National Farmers Union said it 鈥渨ill go a long way聽towards聽building the resilient, equitable food system that farmers and consumers deserve.鈥
鈥淲e鈥檝e urged administration after administration for the past 20 years to begin proper enforcement of both antitrust laws and the 100-year-old Packers and Stockyards Act and this is the first administration to actually take action,鈥 said Bill Bullard, CEO of rancher group, R-CALF USA, in an e-mailed statement.
Zippy Duvall, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, said the group would examine the details of the order, and would work with the administration 鈥渢o ensure changes are consistent with our grassroots policy, and farmers and ranchers are provided greater flexibility to remain competitive in our growing economy.鈥
INDUSTRY OPPOSITION
罢丑别听, a trade group representing meat and poultry producers, said it remained opposed to changes to the act that Biden was seeking to amend.
鈥淕overnment intervention in the market will increase the cost of food for consumers at a time when many are still suffering from the economic consequences of the pandemic,鈥 said Julie Anna Potts, president and CEO of the Meat Institute.
Company shares in the agricultural sector traded mostly higher amid a broad rebound in the stock market. Tyson Foods, Inc., the biggest US meat company by sales, rose as much as 1.6%.
Currently, if a farmer wants to sue a company for anti-competitive behavior under the act, the farmer would need to show the company鈥檚 actions hurt not only him, but the entire industry. That creates a very high bar that the Obama rules would have lowered. But the Trump administration withdrew the rules, leaving groups like the Organization for Competitive Markets disappointed.
Fred Stokes, the founder of OCM, and a cattle rancher in Porterville, Mississippi, is cautiously optimistic that the new order will 鈥渟ettle that once and for all and meatpackers would again be subject to action regarding their ill deeds,鈥 he said.
Citing recent supply chain-interruptions, including a聽聽at a Tyson plant in Kansas in 2019, the pandemic and the recent聽聽against top meat producer JBS SA, he said that packers use these opportunities to charge consumers more for meat, and pay ranchers less for cattle, inflating their profits. Without the changed rule, he said, individual ranchers have little legal recourse.
PROCESSING CAPACITY
The USDA also announced plans to invest $500 million to increase meat-processing capacity, with the aim of giving farmers, ranchers and consumers more choices, according to an agency statement. The agency also announced more than $150 million for existing small and 鈥渧ery small鈥 processing facilities to help them contend with the ongoing pandemic and compete.
鈥淲e have got to expand the amount of processing capacity in this country,鈥 Vilsack said during a news conference in Iowa on Friday. 鈥淲e can no longer rely on a handful of processing companies to do the job, to make the market competitive, to do right by farmers鈥 and 鈥渢o ensure as well that we have a resilient food supply system,鈥 he said. 鈥 Bloomberg


