More Corporate Welfare Embedded in the Farm Bill
THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION.
More Corporate Welfare Embedded in
the Farm Bill
by Charli Coon and Ronald D. Utt,
Ph.D.
Among the many troubling provisions
of the costly farm bill signed into law by President Bush in 2002 were several
to provide even more federal subsidies to rural
electric cooperatives, which are already heavily subsidized. These co-ops
produce and distribute low-cost power and telephone service to those lucky enough to live in the rural areas they serve. When these new debt guarantee subsidies are
finally implemented, they could expose taxpayers to billions of dollars in
prospective loan losses. The President should ask Congress to amend the law
and eliminate these risky and unnecessary subsidies.
An Old Deal
The federally subsidized system of electric co-ops was created in 1935
during the depths of the Great Depression, which was especially severe in the rural parts of
In an effort to get the economy going and provide relief for rural
areas, President Roosevelt signed an executive order that authorized the USDA
to provide low-cost federal loans to
build the infrastructure power plants and lines - to provide subsidized
electricity to unserved farms and rural areas. To be
eligible for these new loans, rural electric suppliers had to be organized as cooperatives, that is, owned by their customers. As cooperatives, these new utilities
also benefited from other valuable government subsidies, such as exemption from
federal income taxes and low-cost federal hydropower.
By the early 1970s, these electric cooperatives had accomplished their
mission: electrification had reached about 99 percent of rural households and
farms. But rather than declare the mission accomplished and disband the
expensive subsidy program, Congress
More Corporate Welfare Embedded in the Farm Bill
continued it and allowed it to become even
more generous, as the gap between the government's subsidized co-op lending
rate and market rates widened. Adding to
taxpayers' burden were periodic co-op loan defaults and bankruptcies that have
cost billions of dollars.
Wholly dependent upon government
largesse and privilege and subject to increased scrutiny of some in Congress
and the White House looking for opportunities to trim federal spending by
reducing corporate welfare, the electric co-op industry diversified its source
of loans in 1969 by creating the private, not-for-profit National Rural
Cooperative Finance Corporation (CFC). The CFC acts as a bank for co-ops, using
its borrowing clout to raise money in private financial markets at favorable
interest rates. It uses these funds to provide loans to the thousands of
electric co-operatives scattered around the country. As such, CFC loans are an alternative to the
subsidized federal loans that co-ops still receive from USDA's Rural Utilities
Service (RUS). Today, the CFC is a $20 billion private financial institution with
ready access to private credit markets and acts wholly independent of the
federal government.
While the CFC has grown to be an
important source of private credit for rural electric co-ops, the federal
government remains their largest lender. Today, the RUS
holds over $40 billion in co-op loans financed with funds made available from
the U.S. Treasury and made at the U.S. Treasury's own borrowing cost or less.
Various reports by the U.S. General Accounting Office reveal that the RUS has suffered billions of dollars in loan losses over
the years.
Although several recent Presidents
have successfully reformed the subsidization of electric co-ops, the process
has not been one of smooth progress.
Thanks to industry lobbying and congressional interference, two steps forward
have often been followed by several steps back. For example, a program was
initiated in the late 1980s that allowed co-ops to repay their government debt
at a generous discount if they promised to leave the public RUS
system forever and rely solely of the private CFC for all future loans. Many
co-ops took the money and left the RUS, but Congress
later limited the period of exile to ten years. Thus, many co-ops that took the
money and left are now back on the federal dole. At the same time, co-ops that
defaulted on their loans in the past - at a cost of billions of dollars to the
taxpayer - are also now back and borrowing again from the government.
Risky Business
But none of these lapses are quite
as bad as a new privilege slipped into
More
Corporate Welfare Embedded in the Farm Bill
the 2002 Farm Security Act that requires
the U.S. Treasury to grant the full
faith and credit of the U.S. Government to $3 billion of debt issued by the
heretofore independent, self-reliant, and private CFC. Unlike the other
setbacks, which only partially undid important program improvements, this would
be an expansion of the federal government into an area that has been fully
independent of federal government involvement or direct subsidy since 1969.
So far, the required guarantee privilege has not yet been granted due to delays
in developing regulations and an effective system of oversight, but it will be
soon.
In congressional testimony from late
February 2004, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan warned of the
potential risks to the economy and to
Congress should recognize that guaranteeing the CFC's loans expose the
government to the same sort of risk. How much in losses are at stake through all of this
federal credit market exposure? It is impossible to say in advance, but it is
worth noting that the savings and loan bailout of the 1980s cost the federal
taxpayers over $130 billion.
Under the circumstances, there is no justification for increasing the
government's financial market risk by exposing the taxpayer to yet another
major private lending institution whose chief borrowers have had their fair
share of financial problems in recent decades. To this end, the President
should ask Congress to amend the law to delete the guarantee provision, and
Congress should act on that request.
Charli Coon is Senior Policy Analyst in
the Thomas A. Roe
Institute for Economic Policy Studies, and Ronald C. Utt,
Ph.D., is Herbert and Joyce Morgan Senior Research Fellow, at The Heritage
Foundation.
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