Terry
Steinhour and his wife Phyllis farm about 650 acres in Springfield,
Illinois, the heart of corn-producing country. The Steinhours’ are
well-respected in their central Illinois community, and Terry is
active with his church and the Illinois Farm Bureau. During the last
six months, Terry has also been involved and vocal about reforming US
farm policy. “It should address the needs of family farmers, not
industrial-sized farms,” he said.
In July of 2006, Terry’s views on US
farm policy began to broaden when he went to West Africa with Oxfam
America, an international development agency. Terry traveled with four
other farmers to Senegal and Mali and met with African farmers and
public officials to discuss the impact American farm policies have on
the rest of the world. They all delivered the same message: “Do
something about your country’s farm subsidies . . . they’re killing
us!”
“We were all stunned by what we experienced,” he said. In one of the
numerous newspaper clippings about his trip in the Lincoln Courier is
a striking picture of Terry with local residents of a Malian village
eating rice and meat with his bare hands from a communal bowl of
food.
“I had only been aware of African society from TV or in the news,”
Terry said. “The poverty was so extreme and widespread.” The
experience was life changing, especially the new knowledge that farm
communities around the world are affected by the decisions of U.S.
policymakers.
Another stunning fact is that one fifth of the world’s population --
over one billion people -- live on less than a dollar a day. A great
majority of these people live in rural areas and are dependent on
agriculture for their livelihoods. Because of unfair trade practices,
the world’s poorest families find themselves trapped in a cycle of
poverty.
It’s shocking that the average European cow receives more in
government subsidies every day than half the world’s population earns
in wages. Propped up by government subsidies, American and European
farmers unload cheap goods on the world market at a cost often far
below the price of production, leaving farmers in the developing
world, not to mention the majority of American family farmers, unable
to sell, much less compete.
In 2005, the US spent close to $24 billion on agricultural subsidies,
most directed to large-scale corporate-owned farming operations like
Monsanto, Cargill and Archer Daniels Midland (ADM).
Terry Steinhour also receives government subsidies. “I don’t like
receiving them,” he says, “but yes, I cash the checks.” For Terry and
other Midwestern farmers, subsidies are a matter of survival. “I would
much rather receive a fair price for what I produce on my farm and
eliminate the need for the check from Uncle Sam,” he explained.
Terry said many Central Illinois corn growers only make a small profit
or experience a net loss on their farms. “I can’t think of anyone that
doesn’t have off-the-farm income to make it by. There’s got to be some
sort of safety net for US farmers but the current system makes farmers
overproduce, which pushes prices down. I got lucky this year with the
ethanol boom but who knows if it will last.”
Before the price of corn increased due to demand for corn-based
ethanol, Terry was making a small profit for every acre of corn he
grew. Terry is now afraid prices are artificially high and the demand
for corn won’t last very long.
“US Farm policy promotes overproduction of the commodity farm, which
has effects on the third world and on the American diet, says Michael
Pollan, journalist and author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma. “The
price of fast food and meat has gone down while the price of fruit and
vegetables has gone up. What does that tell us? Current farm policy
has little support for local agriculture and local foods.”
On a hot day in the village of Dafara in the West African nation of
Mali, an entire community, in a well-prepared presentation, explained
to Terry and his travel companions that US farm policy is decreasing
their cotton prices. One villager stood up and said, “The only thing
we know is to work hard. Is there something you can do with your
government so I can get something out of what I do?”
It was hard at first for Terry to relate his plight with that of
Seydou Ouedraogo, a cotton farmer from Burkina Faso, who hopes to
someday live at the poverty line, instead of far below it. Speaking to
him, Terry began to understand the effect subsidized farming has on
countries -- and people -- throughout the world. Like Terry, Seydou
provides for his family through his land. Like most farmers in the
region, he engages in a mix of subsistence farming for his family and
cotton for a cash crop, which he grows on about 10 acres of land.
Unlike Terry, Seydou does not receive any subsidies.
Cotton is by far the largest commodity crop in West Africa. After the
costs for seed and fertilizer, there is not much left for anything
else. Twenty cents per pound of cotton is Seydou’s dream price and
last year, he received 17.5 cents per pound. However, projections are
much lower this year and Seydou expects to receive only 10 cents per
pound. With the US spending up to $4 billion dollars annually to
subsidize American cotton farmers to produce more than the market
demands, Seydou’s dream price remains a fantasy.
“How do you reach out and help those less fortunate?” Terry asks. “I’m
going to continue working with Oxfam to change US farm policy. It’s
the only option to help third-world countries.”
Negotiations will soon begin on the 2007 Farm Bill, the five-year
legislation that governs US food and farm policy. Terry and others
will join the efforts of Oxfam America to mobilize people and lobby
key members of Congress to significantly reduce the subsidies that
encourage overproduction and redirect those resources to programs that
will help small businesses and non-commodity organic farmers, build
rural infrastructure and create conservation programs that encourage
farmers to better care for the environment.
Terry plans to take his experience on the road. He has pledged to talk
to people wherever he can find an audience about the abject plight of
the West African farmers and the far-reaching consequences of the US
Farm Bill, which many voters may know little about.
“The Farm Bill has been the playground of people in the farm states,”
Michael Pollan continued. “But it’s not just a ‘farm bill,’ it’s a
food bill.” This legislation encompasses nutrition and food programs
across the US and literally determines what Americans eat. Pollan said
more people are now interested in changing farm and food policy
because of concerns about obesity, diabetes and the situation of poor
people, both here and in developing countries. Even the involvement of
an international organization such as Oxfam in a food and farm debate
is exciting, according to Pollan.
Terry agrees that the 2007 Farm Bill provides great potential for
unity. “Groups from different backgrounds including farmers, faith
communities and city dwellers are beginning to realize that this
touches the lives of many people around the globe and the time has
come to promote a better Farm Bill and a better world.”
Katie Danko is the Midwest Field
Organizer for Oxfam America and works primarily on Oxfam’s campaign to
reform the 2007 Farm Bill. She has a background in grassroots
community organizing around a variety of issues including public
housing, clean water, clean air and federal farm policy. This article
first appeared at
Conscious Choice.