Updated EWG Farm Subsidy Database shows largest producers reap billions, despite climate crisis (2024)

EWG’s newly updated Farm Subsidy Database shows that federal farm subsidies between 1995 and 2021 totaled $478 billion. This huge amount of taxpayer money does almost nothing to help farmers reduce their greenhouse gas emissions or adapt to adverse weather conditions caused by the climate crisis.

Our database update also shows that farm subsidy funding still goes to the largest and wealthiest farms, which can weather the climate crisis best, and that payments are getting less transparent, obscuring who has received almost $3.1 billion in payments.

The Department of Agriculture’s subsidy funding could be used in much more useful ways that would help farmers in mitigating their emissions and becoming more resilient to hazardous weather conditions. Instead, it’s still a handout for rich landowners, city dwellers and family members of farmers. Even the USDA is benefiting, with one of its divisions receiving almost $350 million in payments.

Billions in benefits for the largest farms

Federal farm subsidies are payments made to farmers under the guise of protecting food security and weather-related risks. In reality, most farm subsidies go to commodity crops, such as corn and soybeans, which are not grown to feed people, and to the largest and wealthiest farms, which are best prepared to endure the floods, droughts and other extreme weather caused by the climate crisis.

EWG has been investigating federal farm subsidy programs since 2001. That year we created our first iteration of the Farm Subsidy Database, which tracks the names and locations of farm subsidy recipients and the amount of money they receive each year, going back to 1995.

EWG researchers update the database periodically – most recently in February 2023, with new data from 2020 and 2021. This latest iteration shows federal farm subsidies between 1995 and 2021 total $478 billion.

Throughout the past 22 years, the largest and wealthiest farms have always received most of the subsidies. Between 1995 and 2021, the top 10 percent of farm subsidy recipients that received the largest payments received over 78 percent of commodity program subsidies, and the top 1 percent received 27 percent of payments.

The top recipients are large and wealthy farms because that’s how farm subsidy programs are designed – payments are made based on acreage or production, so the farms with the most acres or most crops produced get the largest payments.

Meanwhile, the smallest 80 percent of recipients – those that, by virtue of the small size of their operations, only qualify for small payments – collectively received only about 9 percent of subsidies.

Farm subsidies getting less transparent

The latest Farm Subsidy Database update reveals that, in recent years, the USDA has become significantly less transparent about how it discloses payments, obscuring who has received some $3.1 billion.

For most of the 22 years EWG has tracked subsidies, the USDA has released the names of all farm recipients in response to our Freedom of Information Act requests. Now, at odds with that standard procedure, the agency is leaving some of the recipient names out of its responses to our requests. Specifically, when a recipient has an operating loan with any bank or other financial institution, the USDA now releases the name of the bank or financial institution, not the person’s name.

Farm subsidies are sent to the banks instead of the recipients, to help pay off farmers’ operating loans. This is not a new practice. But it is new for the USDA to give us the bank names instead of the farmers’ names. The change occurred when the Trump administration switched to a new reporting system, in 2019. The USDA claimed the move was to increase efficiency but gave no reason why the new system names banks instead of recipients. The agency has denied our appeals for the farmer names.

This gap in disclosure makes it impossible to know how many people may be getting such payments, what they’re growing, and other key information. It effectively conceals the beneficiaries of almost $3.1 billion in taxpayer dollars between 2019 and 2021.

But it also means we can garner unprecedented insight into the main lending institutions farmers use. Surprisingly, the financial institution that received the most farm subsidies was the USDA. The USDA’s Farm Service Agency, or FSA, alone got almost $350 million in farm subsidies between 2019 and 2021, more than any other financial organization.

Federal farm subsidy programs are rife with problems, such as how many individual recipient names are hidden behind elaborate farm partnerships. The programs are notorious for numerous loopholes that enable rich landowners, city dwellers and family members of farmers to receive huge amounts of money each year.

In addition, most subsidy payments go to farmers of commodity crops – not food people eat – as well as the largest and wealthiest farms and white farmers. Farmers can even get duplicate or triplicate payments.

All of these issues are very hard to fix without more transparency about who receives taxpayer dollars in the form of farm subsidies. All farm subsidy recipient names should be divulged to the public, as they were for many years.

The USDA is paying itself subsidies

Analyzing new data in our Farm Subsidy Database, EWG researchers found that $3.08 billion in farm subsidies went to 1,134 financial institutions between 2019 and 2021. This made up over 6 percent of all farm subsidies paid out in those years.

The Price Loss Coverage commodity program, or PLC, paid out the most money to financial institutions. Across all programs, the PLC made up 59 percent of payments to financial institutions, or $1.8 billion. PLC payments are triggered if crop prices are lower than expected.

The 10 financial institutions that received the most money got over $1.06 billion in payments, representing 35 percent of subsidies paid to financial institutions and 2.2 percent of payments to all farm subsidy recipients (Table 1).

The financial institution that received the most money was a division of the USDA – its FSA got $346.7 million, or 11 percent of payments to financial institutions, and just under 1 percent of all farm subsidy payments. Dairy programs were responsible for the most money sent to the FSA, with the PLC a close second program.

Table 1. The top 10 financial institutions received $1 billion in farm subsidies between 2019 and 2021.

Financial institution farm subsidy recipients

Payments in 2019

Payments in 2020

Payments in 2021

Total payments, 2019-2021

Payment rank

Farm Service Agency

$141,761,586

$117,274,624

$87,642,554

$346,678,764

1

Agrifund LLC

$104,376,586

$97,492,566

$34,862,577

$236,731,729

2

AgCountry Farm Credit Services

$32,725,238

$40,421,061

$18,455,648

$91,601,947

3

First South Farm Credit

$29,026,100

$34,088,337

$12,831,367

$75,945,804

4

Capital Farm Credit

$27,208,799

$28,524,287

$14,955,586

$70,688,671

5

AgHeritage Farm Credit Services

$31,218,644

$21,691,236

$11,592,718

$64,502,599

6

Ag Texas Farm Credit Services

$25,420,466

$20,570,710

$9,821,304

$55,812,481

7

Prosperity Bank

$23,458,818

$16,374,912

$6,364,211

$46,197,941

8

Farm Credit Midsouth

$21,662,135

$11,134,154

$5,372,002

$38,168,290

9

City Bank

$17,729,988

$14,494,248

$5,748,971

$37,973,207

10

Source: EWG, from public records requests for USDA-FSA farm subsidy program data.

As the table shows, just two financial institutions, the FSA and Agrifund LLC, got $583 million – over half the money that went to the top 10 financial institutions and 19 percent of the total received by banks.

The USDA must improve transparency

Reporting subsidies by bank name conceals the people who are actually benefiting from farm subsidies, undermining the USDA’s transparency and accountability. Taxpayers and lawmakers deserve to know who gets farm subsidies and what they grow.

As an agricultural policy analyst with extensive expertise in federal farm subsidy programs and their implications, I have actively studied, analyzed, and contributed to discussions surrounding agricultural subsidies, particularly in the United States. My insights are rooted in thorough research, ongoing engagement with related data, and a comprehensive understanding of the evolving landscape of farm subsidy initiatives.

The article you provided touches on various crucial concepts within the realm of federal farm subsidies and agricultural policy. It sheds light on several key aspects:

  1. Farm Subsidy Database: The EWG (Environmental Working Group) has maintained a comprehensive Farm Subsidy Database since 2001, tracking recipient names, locations, and subsidy amounts dating back to 1995. This database reveals that federal farm subsidies between 1995 and 2021 totaled $478 billion.

  2. Recipient Distribution and Transparency: The distribution of farm subsidies heavily favors the largest and wealthiest farms, mainly allocating payments to commodity crops rather than crops intended for direct human consumption. Transparency has decreased over time, with recent changes obscuring recipient names, particularly when linked to financial institutions or banks rather than individual farmers.

  3. Subsidy Recipient Patterns: Over the past two decades, the top percentage of farm subsidy recipients (the top 10% and top 1%) received a disproportionately large share of the total subsidies. This pattern persists due to payment systems based on acreage or production, favoring larger farms.

  4. Transparency Challenges: Recent changes in reporting systems, particularly during the Trump administration, have led to decreased transparency. The USDA's reluctance to disclose recipient names directly contributes to a lack of accountability and understanding regarding who benefits from these subsidies.

  5. FSA and Financial Institutions: Notably, financial institutions themselves, including the USDA's Farm Service Agency (FSA), have received substantial amounts of farm subsidies, raising questions about transparency and the actual beneficiaries behind these payments.

  6. Need for Transparency and Accountability: The article highlights the importance of disclosing all farm subsidy recipient names to the public, as was previously done. The lack of transparency hinders the understanding of who receives taxpayer-funded subsidies and for what purposes.

  7. Issues with Subsidy Programs: Various loopholes and flaws in subsidy programs enable diverse entities, including wealthy landowners, urban dwellers, and family members of farmers, to receive considerable sums, often for commodity crops rather than food crops.

In summary, the article underscores the urgent need for increased transparency, accountability, and reevaluation of federal farm subsidy programs to ensure that taxpayer money effectively supports farmers in adapting to climate challenges and promotes sustainable agricultural practices rather than disproportionately favoring large, wealthy entities.

Updated EWG Farm Subsidy Database shows largest producers reap billions, despite climate crisis (2024)
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