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handle is hein.crs/goverav0001 and id is 1 raw text is: Farm Bill Primer: Budget Dynamics

Congress is considering a new farm bill because provisions
in the 2018 farm bill (P.L. 115-334) and its one year
extension (P.L. 118-22, Division B, §102) began expiring at
the end of FY2024 (CRS Report R47659, Expiration of the
2018 Farm Bill and Extensionfor 2024). On May 23, 2024,
the House Committee on Agriculture ordered reported H.R.
8467. The Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and
Forestry has not released bill text for a farm bill.
Farm Bls from a Budget Perspective
Federal spending for agriculture is divided into two main
categories-mandatory and discretionary spending:
* Mandatory spending is authorized primarily for the
farm commodity programs, conservation, crop
insurance, and the nutrition assistance programs. A farm
bill authorizes outlays for mandatory programs when the
law is enacted.
* Discretionary appropriations are authorized for most
other programs, including rural development, research,
and credit programs. Farm bills set program parameters.
Funding may be provided in appropriations acts.
Some farm bill programs have received both types of
funding. Discretionary appropriations are the primary
source for many programs, but mandatory spending usually
dominates the farm bill budget debate and is the focus here.
Importance of Base ne to the Farm Bill
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) baseline is a
projection at a particular point in time of what future federal
mandatory spending would be under the assumption that
current law continues. The baseline is the benchmark
against which proposed changes in law are measured.
When a bill is proposed that would affect mandatory
spending, the score (cost impact) is measured in relation to
the baseline. Changes that increase spending relative to the
baseline have a positive score; those that decrease spending
relative to the baseline have a negative score.
Increases in a bill's total cost beyond the baseline may be
subject to budget constraints, such as pay-as-you-go
(PAYGO) rules. Reductions from the baseline may be used
to offset costs for other provisions that have a positive score
or used to reduce the federal deficit. The annual budget
resolution determines whether a farm bill is held budget
neutral or can increase or must decrease spending.
Recent Farm Bills' Budget Positions
Over the past two decades, farm bills have had both
positive and negative scores relative to their baselines,
according to CBO. The 2002 farm bill had a positive score
and increased spending by $73 billion over 10 years under a

Updated October 18, 2024

budget resolution during a budget surplus. The 2008 farm
bill was budget neutral, although it added $9 billion to
outlays over 10 years by using offsets from a tax-related
title. The 2014 farm bill had a negative score, reducing
spending by $16 billion over 10 years. The 2018 farm bill
was budget neutral with increases in some titles offset by
reductions in others. In 2024, the House committee's bill,
H.R. 8467, would increase the 10-year cost by $33 billion.
Co's une 2024 Baseline
In June 2024, CBO released a new baseline that updates
spending projections. It is the latest scoring baseline for the
118th Congress, though CBO used the May 2023 baseline to
score H.R. 8467 based on when it was introduced.
Farm bills have 5-year and 10-year budget projections
according to federal budgeting practices. Converting the
baseline update for programs into farm bill titles and adding
funding indicated in law for other farm bill programs, CRS
estimates that the 2024 baseline for all farm bill titles is
$662 billion over 5 years (FY2025-FY2029) and $1,364
billion over 10 years (FY2025-FY2034) (Figure 1).
For individual agricultural programs with baseline,
excluding nutrition, current projections are for $265 billion
of outlays over the next 10 years (Figure 2).
Figure I. Farm Bill Titles with Mandatory Baseline
(billions of dollars, 10-year projected outlays, FY2025-FY2034)

Commodi o(ties, $73
Conservation, $58

Source: Created by CRS using the Congressional Budget Office
(CBO) June 2024 baseline for the five largest titles and amounts
indicated in law for programs in other titles.
Extension of the Farm Bill in 2024
The one-year extension of the farm bill covers FY2024 and
the 2024 crop year. It authorizes the continuation of
programs with a mandatory spending baseline and provides
one year of new mandatory funding for some programs that

Total: $1,364 bilion
Crop Insurance, $123

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