The following are details on the Market Facilitation Program (MFP), including what payments will be, who is eligible, and where to apply as provided by the USDA.
Jessie Scott grew up on a corn, soybean, and cow-calf farm in Marengo, Iowa, where her parents farm today. In 2012, Jessie joined the Successful Farming team to cover new farm equipment. That coverage expanded to include coordinating news coverage on Agriculture.com and overseeing social media, newsletters, and search. In 2019, Jessie moved into a sales and marketing role. At the end of 2022, Jessie came back to the editorial team to oversee content creation and distribution for Agriculture.com before moving into the editor in chief role in March 2023.
Published on December 17, 2018The USDA's Trade Retaliation Mitigation package will distribute $9.6 billion in cash payments to producers through the new Market Facilitation Program (MFP). The goal of the program is to assist farmers in response to trade damage from unjustified retaliation by foreign nations.
"Early on, the president instructed me, as Secretary of Agriculture, to make sure our farmers did not bear the brunt of unfair retaliatory tariffs. After careful analysis by our team at USDA, we have formulated our strategy to mitigate the trade damages sustained by our farmers. Our farmers work hard, and are the most productive in the world, and we aim to protect them," said USDA Secretary Sonny Perdue.
The following are details on the MFP, including what payments will be, who is eligible, and where to apply as provided by the USDA.
Soybeans, sorghum, corn, wheat, cotton, dairy, sweet cherries, almonds, and hogs.
Producers need only sign-up once for the market facilitation program to be eligible for the first and second payments. The first payment will equal the MFP rate × 50% of 2018 actual production. For farmers who have already applied, completed harvest, and certified their 2018 production, a second payment will be issued on the remaining 50% of the producer's total production.
Commodity | First and Second Payment Rate | Est. Total Payment (in $1,000s) |
Cotton | $0.06 / lb. | $553,800 |
Corn | $0.01 / bu. | $192,000 |
Dairy (milk) | $0.12 / cwt. | $254,800 |
Pork (hogs) | $8.00 / head | $580,600 |
Soybeans | $1.65 / bu. | $7,259,400 |
Sorghum | $0.86 / bu. | $313,600 |
Sweet cherries (fresh) | $0.16/ lb. | $11,500 |
Almonds (shelled) | $0.03 / lb. | $63,300 |
Wheat | $0.14 / bu. | $238,400 |
Total | $9,567,400 |
The MFP payment will be made after a producer harvests 100% of the crop and provides reliable production records to the Farm Service Agency (FSA). A reliable production record includes copies of receipts, ledgers of income, income statements of deposit slips, register tapes, invoices for custom harvesting, or contemporaneous diaries that are determined acceptable by the FSA county committee.
The payment for dairy is based off the historical production reported for the Margin Protection Program for Dairy or MPP-Dairy. For existing dairy operations, the production history is established using the highest annual milk production marketed during the full calendar years of 2011, 2012, and 2013.
Payment for hog producers will be based off the total number of live hogs on August 1, 2018.
Yes, the MFP payments are capped per person or legal entity:
Note that these payments do not count against 2014 Farm Bill payment limitations.
Beyond producing the eligible crops or livestock, producers must meet the following criteria:
The sign-up period opened in September and runs through January 15, 2019. After signing up, you have until May 1, 2019, to certify your 2018 production.
Note: Due to the partial government shutdown, the deadline will be extended past January 15 for a period of time equal to the number of business days FSA offices were closed, once the government shutdown ends.
In most cases, payments should be made within a few weeks after a farmer has completed the application and certified production, according to the USDA. "Often payments are made within a few weeks," said Bill Northey, USDA under secretary of farm production and conservation, in an interview with AgriTalk on December 18. "There may have been a rush post harvest in some offices to get all of the paperwork done," he adds about why some payments may be taking longer.
For the second payment that was announced on December 17, Northey anticipates some of those payments will come in 2018 and others won't be made until 2019. "We're committed to getting those payments out as soon as we can, but there are several processes that take longer than a few days to get done.
The short answer is no. The USDA is not able to isolate and delay individual payments. However, you can wait to complete your paperwork until 2019.
"If you don't want to receive a payment in 2019, your best way to prevent that is to provide production evidence in 2019 and then you'll get both payments in 2019," says Northey.
Complete the CCC-910 Market Facilitation Program application form. Starting September 4, 2018, that will be available online here.
You can deliver the form to your USDA service center by fax, mail, or email. Or you can take the completed form to your local FSA office.
The application is one page, including front and back. You will provide contact information and information on crops that have been harvested. As you complete harvest for other crops, that can be added to the application. You will also need to sign the form and provide production evidence (examples listed above in question No. 4).
You've got more work to do. Producers who haven't participated in a USDA program will need to establish farm records. To establish a farm tract number, bring these items to your local USDA service center:
During your visit, you may need to complete or update the following forms:
You may also need to complete the following:
The MFP is established under the statutory authority of the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) Charter Act and is under the administration of the USDA FSA. The Charter Act authorizes CCC to assist in the expansion of domestic markets or development of new and additional markets and uses.
Established during the Great Depression and transferred to the USDA in 1939, the CCC has the authority to make direct payments to U.S. growers when prices are low.