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We did have about 3 pretty hard licks below the belt, 2 bad dry years that dried up everything and then last spring everything was froze, the temperature dropped to about 12° when our barley was just about ready to go into the silos and froze everything down. We was declared a disaster area and I thought maybe you could tell me what that meant.

The CHAIRMAN. That means you could get cheap money to recoup. Mr. SNELSON. Yes, that is right. And we had some little better spirits there for a few days and then we went into this designated place where we were to receive our little allotments and I went in and of course I happened to know this gentleman very well that was in that place, and I asked him what the chances were to get a little handout and he said, "Dave, my Lord, if I was to let you have some money every banker in this country would jump on the boys up in Washington."

He said we can't let anybody have money here that can get it anywhere else. My Lord, if that is disastrous-we was declared twice disaster areas and we never derived a penny yet. I don't think there is not too much use of asking any more.

Two years ago when all of our hay was gone and looked like all our cattle was going to starve, then we got declared a disaster area but we didn't get no help.

Senator, did you boys get any down here?

Senator SCOTT. No, sir; they stated we were doing all right.

The CHAIRMAN. Have you any suggestion to make to us as to how to solve this farm problem?

Mr. SNELSON. I would like for the minimum allotment to be raised back up to seven-tenths of an acre.

The CHAIRMAN. That was done just recently.

Mr. SNELSON. Was it?

The CHAIRMAN. Yes.

Mr. SNELSON. It is raised back?

The CHAIRMAN. No, it is not raised back. You would have to repeal laws you passed last year or this year, but we will be glad to consider it.

Mr. SNELSON. I will tell what Kentucky wants to do. They can use them big farms out there to raise some of these short-tail horses for Great Britain so you fellows will loan them the money to buy them with and we will get them to do away with their allotments for 5 years, they say if they can lose their farm for 5 years and still hold their allotments they will do that and not raise burley tobacco. That would be a fine trade to make if we could make that trade. The CHAIRMAN. We will consider it, sir.

Any questions?

We thank you very much.

Mr. Blalock, please.

STATEMENT OF H. G. BLALOCK, PRESIDENT, VIRGINIA FARM BUREAU FEDERATION, RICHMOND, VA.

Mr. BLALOCK. H. G. Blalock, farmer in Mecklenberg County, and also connected with the Virginia Farm Bureau Federation. Senator SCOTT. Mecklenberg County, Va.?

Mr. BLALOCK. Yes, sir.

I have a statement prepared, but in order to save time, with your approval I will file this with you.

The CHAIRMAN. It will be filed for the record.

(Mr. Blalock's prepared statement follows:)

We appreciate greatly the opportunity of appearing here today to discuss with you some of the critical problems now facing farmers.

There isn't any question in the minds of most farmers that we are in a very tight situation. We are fortunate that you are concerned about this and we are even more fortunate that you are willing to examine the problem calmly and without prejudice on a bipartisan basis. Finding one way out of the present situation will not be easy and there are no single shot cures. We are suffering already from too much aspirin and paregoric medicines which are popular to prescribe and easy to take but in this case the patient needs better medicine.

Farmers are specialists in production and the record shows that we do very well at it. We are not, however, specialists in marketing and merchandising and it is here that we need help if we are to clear the pipelines of distribution which are presently clogged with about $82 billion worth of surpluses-rapidly becoming worse and more burdensome every day.

This surplus production is coming from thirty-odd-million acres, for the products of which we have been unable to find satisfactory markets. Many of these acres should never be in cultivation except during periods of national emergency. To keep them under the plow, subject to constant wind and water erosion, producing products for which there is no need and no market, violates sound conservation and economic principles. Farmers know this and we have made and are constanly making attempts to withdraw surplus acres from production. We succeed in taking acres out of tobacco, cotton, wheat, peanuts, and a few other crops perhaps, but these acres, for the most part don't stay idle— they are shifted into the production of some other crop. This transfers the problem from one group of farmers to another but does little to solve the total problem. Our present efforts to eliminate the waste involved in cultivating unneeded acres have developed into a childish game of passing the hot chestnuts. We should be able to do better than this and we can.

We are now spending around $3 million each day on price-support operations. About 1 million is for storage and about 2 million is required to cover losses representing the difference between the support price and the selling price.

The margin of profit per acre on many of our surplus acres is necessarily very slim, representing a very low net return to the farmer. Yet the production from these acres depresses the price and reduces the net which the farmer would otherwise get on his more productive acres. We believe that very serious consideration should be given to a program under which surplus acres would be retired from production and buttoned up in soil-conserving crops, in which condition they would steadily improve in fertility until such time as needed by our rapidly growing population. We should be able to accomplish this for a fraction of what we are spending on our present price-support operation.

Such a program would have many advantages over the present one from the standpoint of the Nation as a whole as well as for farmers. Strictly from a farmer's standpoint, it would help us to move gradually away from features in the present program which have placed severe restrictions and limitations on our ability to earn satisfying net incomes.

Our tobacco program, for example, is often cited as being a model after which other programs should be patterned. From the taxpayers' standpoint it is. In many other respects it is a case of the grass looking greener on the other side of the fence. In Virginia our average flue-cured allotment for 1955 was 4.2 acres. We produce three other types of tobacco. Average 1955 allotments for these types are as follows: Sun-cured, 1.35; fire-cured, 1.31; and barley, 0.64. This is getting fairly close to the breadlines, and these allotments are gradually becoming smaller. The average 1955 allotment for all 4 types produced in Virginia is 2.41 acres. This program is often said to be especially good for the small farmer. How much smaller does he have to get before it isn't good for him any more? A study conducted by Senator Eastland and other members of this committee last summer indicated that much this same thing has been happening to our cotton farmers. We would like to urge that similar studies be made on all of our principal crops. If the results of such studies were widely publicized, producers would have a much better understanding of just why our products are

not being sold to consumers and why surpluses are constantly building up, making it necessary for us to accept year after year drastic and still more drastic acreage cuts, with proportionate reductions in net income. Such studies would also make it much easier for members of this committee and other Congressmen to support measures which would be to the best long-term interest of farmers and for the Nation as a whole.

If we were as expert in merchandising tobacco, for example, as we are in producing it, we would know that our interest in the crop does not end with the first sale on the warehouse floor but continues right on through until the stuff is actually consumed. If we had a good picture of the hurdles and bottlenecks that must be cleared and the competition that must be met by our tobacco on its way to the final consumer, you may be certain that we would insist upon a program under which we could hold and expand our markets and under which tobacco growers would have an opportunity to earn larger net incomes than is presently the case.

During the war years it was easy to get the impression that our only problem was one of price. A hungry and war-torn world grabbed eagerly for nearly anything and everything that we produced and offered for sale. The volume was limited in most cases only by what we could produce. Since the end of the war, however, we have learned that the curtailment of the right to produce can have just as bad results on net income as price reduction. Since our real object in farming is to earn the highest possible net income on our operations, it is important that we consider all of the factors that have a bearing on the net-income picture.

Price is one of these. The amount produced is another. Still another is costs of production. A sky-high price with zero production yields no net income. A zero price with sky-high production gives the same result. Somewhere in between these two extremes we must find the combination that will yield to good farmers the highest net return on their operations.

The question naturally arises, What is the right price for any product from the producer's standpoint? The book answer is fairly easy. It is that price which will move the most product into consumption and return to the producer the best income for his labor, skill, and investment.

If you ask the best collection of business and economic minds in the country to name the right price, in dollars and cents, for a given commodity, the honest answer would have to be "The Lord only knows." The exact answer can only come through trial and error, from experience in dealing with market conditions day by day, in finding out what people want and how much they want it as expressed in the prices they are willing to pay. This will always be true so long as people are free to spend their money as they see fit. There must be some leeway in horse trading if you are going to sell horses.

Surely we know that if we are to have a strong, prosperous, and progressive agriculture we must sell what we produce to consumers. To satisfy the needs of consumers is the only reason for production in the first place. It is from satisfying these needs that we hope to earn a profit in the business of farming. If we agree with this, how then do we go about the job of getting our products sold? There isn't but one way. First we had better take a look at what our competitors are doing. Farmers have many competitors. Some competitors are other farmers producing substitute products. Some are industrial plants producing synthetic substitutes. Other competition, especially for foreign markets, comes from farmers in other lands. We need to keep an eye on competition, whatever and wherever it is. Then, if we want the business, we must be willing to meet our competition on the basis of quality, price and service. All the law in the world can't change that simple fact.

You can help agriculture to be more competitive through research in production and in marketing. You can help clear up the bottlenecks and the misunderstanding that hamper world trade. You can help in heading off undue increases in production costs brought on by monopolistic shenanigans on the part of either labor or industry. You can help by justified tax adjustments such as the removal of the 2 cents per gallon Federal tax on farm used gasoline. These are a few of the ways in which you can be of very real help which will bring lasting benefits to farmers. Above all we request that you not administer another dose of paregoric. It leaves us worse off in the long run.

Mr. BLALOCK. I have listened to the testimony so far and certainly can agree with a lot of it and disagree with some of it.

There has been quite a bit of discussion about the support level or support program in agriculture and quite a bit of discussion on both the 90 percent support and flexible.

I don't think either will solve the problem without some other consideration and certainly we have gotten into a predicament with what we have had whether what we have now would correct it, I don't know, but I don't think it will without other things.

I have listened and read and studied with considerable thought the soil-fertility proposal, and the principle of the thing sounds good, but I don't believe that the soil fertility program alone will get us back to where we would like to be.

I think we are going to have to continue a type of support program and controls of production in order to keep those crops at the farms where the base was established for them until this program proves itself by taking this land out of production that we can correct this problem we are up against.

I do think the soil-fertility program along with continuing type of support program will certainly be a great step toward getting our production in line with supply. Certainly that is the thing I think is depressing the farmer today, the fact that we are producing more than there is a demand for.

The CHAIRMAN. In the statement you have submitted for the record, do you have any plans for retiring these acres?

Mr. BLALOCK. Not definitely. I have some suggestions there that I hope would help you people to work out something.

The CHAIRMAN. Do you believe that the farmer who sets it aside ought to be compensated?

Mr. BLALOCK. Yes, sir; I think since we are using a compensation for our support program and our ACP practices certainly some kind of program should be worked out to use some of the means we are now using in our present program to compensate for that land that is set aside.

The CHAIRMAN. It has been suggested that the same facilities now used in our conservation program and the payments, that the same machinery be used and that the payments that are made be augmented to a certain level so as to compensate the farmer for taking these lands out of his farm and someone suggested he be paid whatever profit he might make on that acreage. Others have said pay the interest only and some return by way of interest on the market value of the land. Have you any suggestions to which plan you would recommend? Mr. BLALOCK. Nothing except we will work with whoever will suggest one that looks best.

The CHAIRMAN. We get that from you, the people. We are here for that. I know in my own mind what I would like to have, but since it is for the farmers of the country, we want them to say how they desire it to be handled, how much compensation they should receive. Mr. BLALOCK. We think certainly the compensation will have to be enough to encourage the farmer to take that out and we don't think that will be an excessive amount and will cost any more than our present type program.

The CHAIRMAN. Do you think such a program could be carried on on a voluntary basis without compensation?

Mr. BLALOCK. No; I don't.

The CHAIRMAN. We would have to get an incentive.

Mr. BLALOCK. Yes, sir; we would have to get an incentive. I don't think you would get it on a voluntary basis without compensation. The CHAIRMAN. What is your view on diverted acres, the use of diverted acres?

Mr. BLALOCK. I think this soil fertility plan is the thing to take up the diverted acres. We have been diverting for a long time but we haven't taken anything out of production, the total. We have taken certain commodities out and shifted over and caused the problems with other commodities.

The CHAIRMAN. Do you think a 10 percent or 15 percent, whatever acreage we may set in the bill, would do the job and that we wouldn't have to do anything about the use of the diverted acres?

That is, other than to have them agree to cross-compliance.

Mr. BLALOCK. I think diverted acreage programs would certainly work into

The CHAIRMAN. It would alleviate the trouble, but alone not entirely solve the problem.

Mr. BLALOCK. Not entirely, I don't think, but would be a great step in that direction. As far as the percentage that you take out, I am not an expert, but we have the records, we know and can get the figures of how much land it is taking to produce a normal supply of all of the crops we are producing and then whatever acreage regardless of what the percentage amounts to that is in excess, let's take it out and certainly you have the privilege of adjusting it from year to year when you need more or less, take out more or pull out less. It must be a flexible program there in regard to how that acreage stands from year to year.

The CHAIRMAN. Anything else?

Mr. BLALOCK. I think there has been mentioned a few times, I happen on my farm to grow a little tobacco and am in the dairy business, some hogs, and I produce feed to feed everything I grow. There has been some question of the dairy situation and this morning was some question as to the dairy production increasing in recent years or months, and I am not saying what has caused the difference that we find there, but in this increased production we have also increased consumption to the extent that the dairy products are considerably less in storage today than they were when the adjustment was made in the dairy situation.

The CHAIRMAN. That is because more was sold, you know.
Mr. BLALOCK. That is right, more was sold.

The CHAIRMAN. Or given away.

Mr. BLALOCK. I wouldn't say given away. I think we are selling more. Certainly we are not putting more, we are putting much less into storage of the dairy products than we were prior to the time this adjustment was made. I think our dairy people certainly in our section are much better satisfied with the movement and dairy situation as it is now than as it was prior to this adjustment.

We were getting very disturbed about the amount that was going into storage previously.

Mr. COOLEY. Do you like the idea of changing the price support from 90 percent to 75 percent all at once?

Mr. BLALOCK. I think when any product due to support prices itself out of the market to where substitutes begin taking our market, we better take a look at what our competition is.

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