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Analyzing Direct Payments to U.S. Farm. Households: Addressing the Distribution. Gap. Jeffrey Hopkins [email protected]. Global Trade Analysis Project ...
Analyzing Direct Payments to U.S. Farm Households: Addressing the Distribution Gap Jeffrey Hopkins [email protected]

Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) Meetings Taipei, Taiwan June 5-7 2002

Decoupling Project

• Domestic and Trade Policy • Production Distortions from Coupled Programs ? Floyd and Gardner models ? Returns distributed among factors of production • Production Distortions from Decoupled Programs ? No distortions due to price effects ? Lump-sum payments may have non-price effects

Slide 1

Production Flexibility Contract Implementation

• PFC payments must go directly to producers • However, landowners are the ultimate beneficiaries Capitalization Sales price includes stream of future PFC payments Pass-through Rental price includes current PFC payments • PFC payments and non-price effects wealth effect preferences change insurance effect outcome truncation

Slide 2

The ‘Distribution Gap’ in Policy Evaluation

• Distributional Analysis may be more relevant for policy purposes than the Veil of Ignorance ? Original position matters • Distributions are endogenous to how recipients make decisions ? “Farming the Program” • Multiple representative agents can be useful compromise between distributional and aggregate approaches

Slide 3

Payments and Average Levels of Well-being Commercial

Farm Type Intermediate

Rural Residences

Panel A. Farm Household Measures of (per-capita) Well-being Direct Payments per capita Total Household Income Wealth Household Expenditures

9,335 41,140 373,998 10,707

2,299 17,755 225,236 9,646

676 17,405 171,878 7,687

5,497 1 99 (78)

1,565 (10) 84 (155)

Panel B. Farm Business Measures of Financial Well-being Direct Payments Return on Assets Ratio Total Production to Economic Costs Ratio Total Production less Economic Costs ($/acre)

22,159 7 117 101

Slide 4

Farm Household Heterogeneity 4th quartile

Cumulative Distribution of Per−capita Incomes, 1996

3rd quartile

−Commercial Farms Average

1st quartile

2nd quartile

−Intermediate Farms Average −Rural Residences Average

−25000

0

25000

50000

75000

100000

Per−capita Household Income

Slide 5

Farm Household Heterogeneity 4th quartile

Cumulative Distribution of Per−capita Expenditures, 1996

3rd quartile

−Commercial Farms Average −Intermediate Farms Average

1st quartile

2nd quartile

−Rural Residences Average

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

35000

Per−capita Expenditures ($)

Slide 6

Farm Household Heterogeneity 4th quartile

Cumulative Distribution of Per−capita Wealth, 1996

3rd quartile

−Commercial Farms Average

−Intermediate Farms Average

1st quartile

2nd quartile

−Rural Residences Average

0

250000

500000

750000

Per−capita Wealth ($) Slide 7

Farm Business Heterogeneity 4th quartile

Cumulative Distribution of Return on Assets, 1996

3rd quartile

−Commercial Farms Average

1st quartile

2nd quartile

−Intermediate Farms Average

−Rural Residences Average

−25

−15

−5

5

15

25

Return on Assets (percent)

Slide 8

Farm Business Heterogeneity

3rd quartile

4th quartile

Cumulative Distribution of Production:Economic Costs Ratio, 1996

−Commercial Farms Average

2nd quartile

−Intermediate Farms Average

1st quartile

−Rural Residences Average

0

50

100

150

200

Total Production Divided by Economic Costs

Slide 9

Farm Business Heterogeneity 4th quartile

Cumulative Distribution Returns to Land per Acre, 1996

2nd quartile

3rd quartile

−Commercial Farms Average

−Intermediate Farms Average

1st quartile

−Rural Residences Average

−300

−200

−100

0

100

200

300

Total Production Minus Economic Costs (per acre)

Slide 10

Payments and Average Levels of Well-being Commercial

Farm Type Intermediate

Rural Residences

Panel A. Farm Household Measures of Well-being (per-capita) Direct Payments per capita Total Household Income Wealth Household Expenditures

9,335 41,140 373,998 10,707

2,299 17,755 225,236 9,646

676 17,405 171,878 7,687

22,159 7 117 101

5,497 1 99 (78)

1,565 (10) 84 (155)

32,221 3,158 15,950

5,490 1,068 2,651

2,392 230 804

Panel B. Farm Business Measures of Well-being Direct Payments Return on Assets Ratio Total Production to Economic Costs Ratio Total Production less Economic Costs ($/acre) Panel C. Transfers to Operators vs. Landlords Direct Transfers to Operators Direct Transfers to Landlords Pass-through

Slide 11

Payment Effect Decomposition

• Observation-level impacts Gross Effect GEi = Yi1 − Yi0, where 1 signifies with-payment and 0 signifies the without-payment level of well-being Y for observation i Pass Through Effect P Ti = αi · GEi, where αi is the share of base acres that are not owned for observation i Net Effect N Ei = GEi − P Ti, the difference between the gross and passthrough effects for observation i • Distribution-level impacts Gross Effect GEq = FYq1 − FYq0 Pass Through Effect P Tq = FYq1 − FY 1,α q Net Effect N Eq = GEq − P Tq

Slide 12

Household Effects

0.0

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1.0

3000

Increase ($)

0

1000

3000

Increase ($)

0

1000

Wealth

1000

3000

Incomes

0

Increase ($)

Expenditures

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Ranked by Expenditures

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Ranked by Income

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Ranked by Wealth

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Panel A. Gross Effects

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Panel B. Pass−through Effects

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Panel C. Net Effects

Slide 13

Business Effects

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1.0

12 8 6 4 2

Increase (%)

0

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Increase ($/Acre) 0.2

0

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Increase (%)

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Output:Costs

10 15 20 25

Land Returns

3.0

Profits

0.0

Ranking by ROA

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Ranked by Returns

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Ranked by Ratio

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Panel A. Gross Effects

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Panel B. Pass−through Effects

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Panel C. Net Effects

Slide 14

Summary

• Household-level net effects of payments are more uniform than gross effects suggest ? payments are still correlated to well-being in the case of expenditures and wealth ? Shallower “U” with income • Business-level net effects are not correlated with firm performance ? Net Payments are flat across profits and break-even distributions ? Net payments negatively correlated to residual land returns

Slide 15

Implications for Decoupling • Reliance on rented base acres results in most (63%) benefits passing through to landlords outside production sector • Commercial farms, with high use of rented acreage, pass through most (72%) benefits. These farms received 59% of payments • Net payments after pass through are more proportional for most measures of well-being, exceptions include: ? Positive correlation of expenditures and net payments suggestive of effect on consumption ? Positive correlation with wealth leaves little scope for large wealth effect on risky behavior Slide 16