ASO-Lmcaster Farming, Saturday, Octobar 19,1985 COLLEGE PARK, MD - A 15- month effort by Congress and the U.S. Department of Agriculture to reduce dairy surpluses in this country was both a short-run success and a long-term failure, according to two University of Maryland agricultural economists. The dairy diversion program, established by Congress in 1983 under the Dairy and Tobacco Adjustment Act, proved successful Maritime WASHINGTON - Maritime interests won the opening round in the cargo preference dispute with a victory in the House of Representatives, but farm representatives claim the issue is not yet decided. By a 245-179 vote, the House of Representatives defeated an amendment to the Farm Bill which would have limited cargo preference to food-aid shipments. Farm interests led by the American Farm Bureau Federation called for the exemp tion of farm products sold under the commercial export program such as blended credit. The cargo preference law requires that 50 percent of government-generated trade be shipped on American flag vessels. Farm representatives claim the cargo preference efforts will backfire. “The programs will be too expensive,” charged Paul Drazek, international trade specialist for the American Farm Bureau Federation. These added requirements will make the farm export programs unworkable. The Farm/City event adds Pedal Pull 9 LANCASTER - In conjunction and 7-8. with the Annual Farm/City Week Each child that participates will to be held at Park City, children’s receive a small prize. Additionally pedal tractor pulling will again be first place winners receive a major held Saturdaj, Oct 26 at 3p m on award and second place winners the sidewalk between the Gimbels receive a jacket patch Prizes are and Watt & Shand malls furnished by the four sponsoring Sponsors are: Lancaster Ford •'-farm machinery dealers. Pull will Tractor, Landis Brothers, Messick be managed by Dave and Mike Farm Equipment, and L.H. Nolt of Paradise, Pa Brubaker Farm Equipment. Sign-up by the children’s parents All equipment including pedal should occur at the Lancaster Ford tractors will be furnished. Classes Tractor display earlier in the week include girls or boys, ages 3-4, 5-6, in the Park Cih Mall Diversion: during its 15 months because the total farm marketings of U.S. milk fell in that period. And, taxpayers got a break during the 15 months the program was in effect because the cost of the program was paid by dairy farmers and the federal govern ment actually reduced the amount of surplus dairy products it pur chased for storage. However, the program did not interests win first round upshot is that farm exports will not expand and therefore, no benefits will accrue to the maritime in dustry. We are not taking an anti mantime position. We simply want to reestablish a healthy com mercial export market for U.S. agriculture. This cannot be ac complished if cargo preference is forced on commercial export programs,” said Drazek. The U.S. maritime industry charges that the cargo preference is necessary because other countries subsidize their merchant marine. “We have never said that the U.S. merchant marine should not be subsidized in order to compete or for national security purposes. But, adding the cost of those subsidies to the price of U.S. farm exports is not the solution. We seriously doubt that other countries subsidize their maritime industries in a similar fashion.” Cost studies show cargo preference raises the cost of farm exports by as much as $7O per ton. Until a court ruling this past spring, farm products sold under the blended credit program some good news, some bad provide a permanent reduction of milk production, say Robert J. Belter and John W Wysong, specialists in the university’s Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics* ‘ln fact, total milk production skyrocketed after the end of the diversion period on March 31 of this year,” says Belter. "The cost to the taxpayers for surplus milk purchases by USDA’s operated outside the cargo preference requirement. “The immediate effect of the court decision was the end of the blended credit program because the added costs of cargo preference totally nullified the benefits of the program. As a result, farmers have lost a great deal and the maritime industry has gained nothing from the ruling," Drazek said. "Cargo preference of one form or another has been m place for 30 years and in all that time it has done little to sustain this country’s shipping industry,” Drazek added. MILLER DIESEL INC. 6030 Jonestown Rd., Harrisburg, PA 17112 717-545-5931 Interstate 81 Exit 26 Commodity Credit Cooperative in 1985 is approaching $1.5 billion and climbing,” he adds. One reason why milk production rose after the program ended this year; many producers who par ticipated in the program found ways to get around making a permanent commitment to reduced production. A significant number of dairy producers used practices such as reduced feeding, delayed breeding, and feeding milk to livestock to create a temporary reduction of milk production and marketings, according to Wysong. ■ This enabled dairy producers to increase immediately following the diversion period,” says Wysong. In addition, farmers replaced more cows-which is an indication of gearing up for production-at the end of the program than they had in any previous year since 1965, he adds. Belter and Wysong say a number of factors may have contributed to the program’s long-term failure. Fifteen months may be too short of time to expect a permanent downward adjustment in milk AUTO/TRUCK DIESEL TREATMENT totally disperses water. It eliminates water even better than water separators It also keeps injectors clean, improves engine efficiency, and con tains no harmful alcohol. Use it in every tankful all year round IT COSTS SO LITTLE TO PROTECT SO MUCH Use Polar Power from Dec. thru Feb to prevent waxing & gelling. It also disperses water. Gas Treatment treats leaded & unleaded gasoline. Totally disperses water, increases m " eage DIESEL FUEL INJECTION & TURBO CHARGER SPECIALIST production, they say. The low cost of feed grams may be too attractive to expect farmers to reduce feeding this year and next. Milk support prices, although lower than in 1983-84, may still be too high to bring about reduced production, they add. Feed prices declined in recent years as production surpluses of corn and soybeans returned. “Reducing the support price, as painful as that might be, would permit to some degree the survival of the most efficient producers, or it might separate out the producers with the greatest equity capital base and those with access to capital and credit resources,” Belter says. A longer diversion program, the two agricultural economists say, might help reduce national dairy surpluses by diverting dairy production resources to other types of farm enterprises. A healthier domestic and foreign market for other agricultural commodities might provide in centive to dairy farmers to move to other lines of productive endeavor, according to Belter and Wysohg FPPF