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Congressional Research Service
Informing the legislative debate since 1914


S


                                                                                                    April 3, 2019

2018 Farm Bill Primer: Program Eligibility and Payment Limits


Since 1970, Congress has used various policies to address
the issue of who should be eligible for farm program
payments and how  much an individual recipient should be
permitted to receive in a single year. In recent years,
congressional debate has focused on (1) ensuring that
payments go to persons or entities currently engaged in
farming, (2) attributing payments directly to individual
recipients, (3) capping the amount of payments that a
qualifying recipient may receive in any one year, and (4)
excluding from payment eligibility those farmers or
farming entities with incomes above a certain level as
measured by their adjusted gross income (AGI).
Most recently, the 2018 farm bill (Agricultural
Improvement  Act of 2018, P.L. 115-334) amended
eligibility requirements for benefits under current farm
programs and annual payment limits that vary across
different combinations of farm programs. Major federal
farm programs, along with their current eligibility
requirements and payment limits, are listed in Table 1.

Program Eligibility
Some  requirements are common across most programs,
while others are specific to individual programs. Current
eligibility requirements that are specific to each program
participant but affect multiple programs include:
*  identification of every participating person or legal
   entity-both U.S. and non-U.S.;
*  the nature and extent of an individual's participation
   (i.e., actively engaged in farming criteria), including
   ownership interests in multi-person entities and personal
   time commitments  (whether as labor or management);
*  conservation compliance provisions; and
*  means testing based on an AGI threshold.

Is U.S. Citizenship Required?
In general, if foreign persons or legal entities meet a
program's eligibility requirements, then they are eligible to
participate. One exception is the permanent disaster
assistance programs-Emergency  Assistance for Livestock,
Honeybees, and Farm-Raised Fish Program (ELAP),
Livestock Forage Disaster Program, Livestock Indemnity
Program (LIP), Tree Assistance Program (TAP), and the
Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP)-
under which non-resident aliens are excluded.

Actively Engaged   in Farming  (AEF)
Three categories of legal entities are subject to AEF
requirements for certain farm support program payment
eligibility: an individual, a partnership, and a corporation.
Individual. To be considered AEF, an individual must (1)
make  a significant contribution to the farm of capital,
equipment, or land and be active though personal labor
and/or personal management; (2) share in the risk of loss


from the farming operation; and (3) have a share of profits
or losses commensurate with his or her contribution to the
operation.
A spouse of any person meeting the AEF requirements is
considered to have met the requirements, thus doubling the
individual payment limit. Also, every member of a family
farm engaged in farming (including cousins, nephews, and
nieces) age 18 years or older may be deemed AEF and
eligible for a separate payment limit. Another exception to
AEF  requirements is made for landowners, provided they
receive income based on the farm's operating results.
Partnership. Under a partnership, each member must
individually meet all program requirements, including AEF
and AGI requirements. Each qualifying member is
potentially eligible for payments up to the individual limit.
Corporation. A corporation is treated as a single person for
purposes of determining eligibility and payment limits,
provided that it meets the AEF and other eligibility criteria.
Thus, a corporation is subject to a single payment limit.

Conservation   Compliance
To be eligible for most farm program benefits, a producer
agrees to maintain a minimum level of conservation on
highly erodible land and not to convert or make production
possible on wetlands. Collectively, these two provisions are
referred to as conservation compliance.

AG!  Threshold
Persons with combined farm and nonfarm AGI in excess of
$900,000 are ineligible for most program benefits. Average
AGI  is measured from the three tax years prior to the most
recent taxable year. The AGI limit may be waived on a
case-by-case basis to protect environmentally sensitive land
of special significance.

Direct   Attribution and Payment Limits
Tracking payments to an individual through ownership
levels in single or multi-person legal entities-referred to as
direct attribution-is critical for assessing an individual's
cumulative payments against his or her annual payment
limit. Current law requires direct attribution through four
levels of ownership in multi-person legal entities.

Issues   for Congress
Eligibility requirements and payment limits strongly
influence what size and type of farms are supported.
Congress has debated what annual payment limit amount is
optimal and whether the limit should be specific to each
program or cumulative across all programs. Program
eligibility requirements and payment limits generate
congressional interest because their effects differ across
regions and by type of commodities produced and because
a substantial amount of annual U.S. farm program payments
are at stake.


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