As the U.S. dairy industry continues to struggle in the face of ongoing low prices, federal policies intended to support farmers are attracting more attention. One example is the Margin Protection Program for Dairy, which provides payments to farmers when the difference between milk and livestock feed prices fall below a coverage level they select. Introduced through the Agricultural Act of 2014 — better known as the Farm Bill — the program was updated through an amendment to the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018.
“It is an insurance-type product,” said Mark Stephenson, an agricultural economist and director of the Center for Dairy Profitability at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in a June 8, 2018 interview on Wisconsin Public Television’s Here and Now.
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“Farmers have to make a decision as to how much protection I need just like we would for auto insurance or fire insurance, and you hope you don’t have an accident,” he added. “But if you do, then it should pay.”
The changes to the Margin Protection Program made in the 2018 federal budget bill significantly reduced premiums, changed the margin period to monthly rather than bi-monthly and extended the deadline for dairy farmers to enroll. This last change allowed participants to reconsider or change their initial coverage amount. The re-enrollment essentially gave farmers a “do-over” and allowed them to collect benefits for time before they enrolled.
“This is unusual because it’s retroactive,” Stephenson told Here & Now. “We get to go back and make a decision about the entire year and we already know that we would be receiving payments at some of these levels of protection.”
Stephenson was appointed on June 5 to lead a group of industry leaders in the Wisconsin Dairy Task Force 2.0, which is charged with making policy recommendations involving the dairy industry in the state. He discussed the changes to the Margin Protection Program with a group of farmers at the town hall in Trempealeau in May. The meeting was part of a statewide effort to educate farmers and ensure they took advantage of the new change in federal policy.
The Margin Protection Program marks nearly a century of dairy market regulation and support by the federal government, which Stephenson said dates back to the late 1930s.
Early involvement to improve market prices
While the extent and nature of government regulation has shifted since the 1930s, what’s remained consistent for the dairy industry is the idea that the milk market must be regulated. In fact, Marin Bozic, an assistant professor in the University of Minnesota’s Department of Applied Economics and associate director of its Midwest Dairy Foods Research Center, said milk is one of the most regulated food products globally for economic reasons and as well as the health and well-being of consumers.
One unique practice embedded in the dairy industry since its inception is the use of cooperatives, a type of business owned and controlled by farmers who produce the milk it sells. According to Brian Gould, professor of agribusiness in the Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the very characteristics of milk are an incentive for this business arrangement.
“You’re producing a product that needs to be stored or used within 48 hours,” Gould said. “Historically, we didn’t have good enough transportation systems, so processing plants had local monopolies because farmers had no choice but to ship to that plan.”
The 1930s marked the beginning of government support for dairy producers. And as Stephenson told Here & Now, the focus then was to improve overall market prices. When market prices fell below minimum set prices, the government stepped in to purchase products above those guaranteed prices.
This report was produced in a partnership between Wisconsin Public Radio, PBS Wisconsin and the University of Wisconsin Cooperative Extension. @ Copyright 2024, Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System and Wisconsin Educational Communications Board.