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Congressional Research Servict
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                                                                                                   May 22, 2019

2018 Farm Bill Primer: Agricultural Trade and Food Assistance


The provisions of Title III of the 2018 farm bill
(Agricultural Improvement Act of 2018, P.L. 115-334)
include programs designed to alleviate hunger and improve
global food security and to expand foreign markets for U.S.
agricultural producers and food manufacturers. Title III
covers international food assistance programs, export credit
guarantee programs, export market development programs,
and international science and technical exchange programs
and provisions. Title III programs derive their statutory
authorities from the Food for Peace Act of 1954 (P.L. 83-
480) for international food assistance programs and the
Agricultural Trade Act of 1978 (P.L. 95-501) for foreign
market expansion programs.

International Food Assistance Programs
As summarized below, the 2018 farm bill amends and
reauthorizes U.S. international food assistance programs.
Food for Peace Title 11
The Food for Peace (FFP) Title II Program donates U.S.
commodities to recipients in foreign countries. The 2018
farm bill eliminates the requirement to monetize at least
15% of FFP Title II commodities-that is, sell on local
markets to fund development projects (§3103). It increases
the minimum allocation for FFP Title II nonemergency
assistance from $350 million to $365 million annually. The
maximum allocation for nonemergency assistance remains
unchanged from prior law at 30% of FFP Title II funds
(§3114).
P.L. 115-334 requires that all FFP Title II assistance,
including locally procured food and printed material that
accompanies other assistance, be labeled as from the
American people (§3101). It also requires that no FFP Title
II assistance-including U.S. commodities, locally
procured food, vouchers, or cash transfers-be provided
unless the recipient country contains adequate storage
facilities and the assistance will not interfere with the local
agricultural economy (§3109). Under prior law, both of
these requirements applied only to food assistance provided
in the form of U.S. commodities.

The 2018 farm bill amends the maximum allocation for
program oversight, monitoring, and evaluation from $17
million to 1.5% of annual funds made available for FFP
Title II. It also specifies a minimum allocation of not less
than $17 million (§3107) and directs the administrator of
the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID),
which administers FFP Title II, to issue all necessary
regulations and revisions to program guidance no later than
270 days after the enactment of P.L. 115-334 (§3106).
Other International Food Assistance Programs
The Farmer-to-Farmer Program (FFP Title V)
coordinates short-term placements for U.S. volunteers to


provide technical assistance to farmers in developing
countries. P.L. 115-334 authorizes a new grant program to
facilitate new and innovative partnerships (§3116).
The McGovern-Dole International Food for Education
and Child Nutrition Program provides U.S. commodities
to developing countries for school feeding programs and for
pregnant and nursing mothers. P.L. 115-334 authorizes up
to 10% of annual program funds to be used for local and
regional procurement-buying food in the country or
region where it will be used rather than in the United States.
It adds a provision that assistance be provided in a timely
manner and when needed throughout the applicable school
year (§3309).
The Food for Progress Program (FPPr) monetizes U.S.
commodities in recipient countries to fund humanitarian or
development projects. P.L. 115-334 directs the Secretary of
Agriculture to include in annual program reports the rate of
return for each commodity provided under FPPr. It
authorizes a pilot program to directly fund activities rather
than funding activities through the proceeds of monetized
commodities, and it authorizes $10 million annually
through FY2023 for the new pilot program (§3302).
The Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust (BEHT) is a
mandatory reserve of funds held by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) that can supplement FFP Title II
assistance when FFP Title II alone cannot meet emergency
food needs. P.L. 115-334 reauthorizes BEHT through
FY2023 (§3303).
The Local and Regional Food Aid Procurement
Program (LRP Program) provides locally and regionally
procured food to recipients instead of food procured from
the United States. P.L. 115-334 reauthorizes the LRP
Program through FY2023 (§3311).

Export Credit Guarantee Programs
The 2018 farm bill (§3201) extends provisions for the
export credit guarantee program (GSM-102) and the
Facility Credit Guarantee Program (FGP), funded through
USDA's Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC). The CCC
is authorized under a permanent law-the CCC Charter Act
of 1948. GSM-102 guarantees credit extended by U.S.
private lenders (or, less commonly, by a U.S. exporter) to
approved foreign financial institutions of up to $5.5 billion
annually for up to 18 months for the purchase of U.S. farm
and food products. FGP is designed to boost sales of U.S.
agricultural products in countries where demand may be
limited due to inadequate storage, processing, handling, or
distribution capabilities. The 2018 farm bill extends
authorization of at least $1 billion per year through FY2023
in direct credits or credit guarantees of up to 10 years to
facilitate the financing of manufactured goods and U.S.


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