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The party's over
For
decades, federal price supports made tobacco and peanuts
exceptionally lucrative. Not any more. Is Virginia ready?
Related
story:
Danville ponders its
post-tobacco future
by
John Peters

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to enlarge
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For
hundreds of years, tobacco and peanuts have been the
icons of Virginias farmlands. Native Americans
taught English colonists their worth, helping save the
Jamestown experiment from economic ruin. Tobacco was
quickly deemed so valuable that one of the very first
laws passed by the very first General Assembly in 1619
was one establishing price supports for the leaf. Four
centuries later, Virginias peanuts won distinction
by being represented by one of advertisings most
beloved and enduring brands the dapper Mr. Peanut
sporting spats, a monocle and a top hat.
Today,
both crops are in serious jeopardy and, as incredible
as it may seem, might vanish altogether. The cause of
their demise? Growers became fatally dependent upon
federal programs designed to save their grandfathers
during the Great Depression nearly 70 years ago. For
generations, federal government quota programs made
peanuts and tobacco exceptionally lucrative by defying
the dynamics of free market pricing. Now the programs
are on their way out, and perhaps the farmers are, too.
As
the end looms, the impacts across the Old Dominion will
be tremendous. From the sandy peanut fields of Southampton
County to the once-proud, red brick tobacco auction
buildings of Danville, local economies are about to
go into turmoil. Peanut buying houses and shelling operations
are shutting down, tobacco auctions are closing, farmland
will go to market by thousands of acres, farm equipment
dealers will go bust and banks will suffer. Peanut-dependent
communities such as Courtland and Franklin will be particularly
hard hit because of a convergence of higher growing
costs and typically lower yields per acre on Virginia
farms.
The
effects on the states economy could be huge, representing
billions of dollars. Philip Morris USA, for instance,
buys Virginia leaf and operates one of the worlds
largest cigarette plants in Richmond. The company prices
its contribution to the Old Dominion economy at $1.7
billion. Tobacco growers themselves produce crops worth
$124 million and the dollar amount is much more when
secondary businesses, such as equipment, fertilizers
and banking are factored in. Peanuts represent $60 million
annually, and thats just the value out the farm
gate.
The
demise of peanuts and tobacco is especially ironic because
political sentiments in growing areas are traditionally
conservative with voters backing free enterprise, low
taxes and limited government. Yet, those areas have
survived for years primarily on the largesse of big
federal government programs that in a different light
might be tarred as socialistic. The federal government
began price supports for tobacco, peanuts and other
crops in 1938 just after the Great Depression. By setting
the poundage that could be sold per acre, the government
kept supplies away from the market that could have been
sold, thus boosting prices. Besides seeming quaint,
this view flies against todays current economic
wisdom of letting markets prevail and accepting the
result.
Originally,
the intention for creating price supports was altruistic.
Tobacco farms were and still are the smallest per acre
in the U.S. Without price supports, the logic back in
the Depression went, hundreds of thousands of leaf growers
would be bust and swarm to welfare lines in cities.
Big tobacco companies, meanwhile, would swoop in and
buy up their tobacco fields for pennies on the acre.
A similar theory went for peanuts.
Problem
was, Franklin Delano Roosevelts programs were
conceived as temporary measures. They involved most
crops, but in time programs for corn and wheat ended
as farmers got back on their feet. Price support schemes
for peanuts and tobacco survived for decades thanks
to strong lobbying by the Souths contingent in
Congress. In time, quotas took on a life of their own,
becoming a transferable rent. They could be sold or
passed on like an heirloom to a relative who may or
may not actually farm the land. Indeed, a review of
U.S. Department of Agriculture records shows that in
Dinwiddie County about one third of all tobacco quotas
are held by individuals who dont even live in
Virginia, but in spots such as Brooklyn, N.Y., Las Vegas
or Chicago.
The
weight of all of this is clearly evident to Darrell
Jackson as he squats down and takes a closer look at
his Henry County tobacco plants. Deer have chewed up
140 of the 6,500 tobacco plants he crammed into the
single acre allotted by a government program for tobacco
this year. It was a battle Jackson fought all summer,
trying to keep his most profitable crop from becoming
a wildlife salad bar.
Yet
he knows that the damage is nothing compared to what
Congress might do. Five different bills are floating
around the halls of Congress, all of them taking aim
in some form or fashion at the tobacco quota and price
support system that makes leaf many times more profitable
to grow than virtually any other crop in the region.
Farmers average $700 to $1,000 per acre so a 50-acre
tobacco quota can net a farmer from $35,000 to $50,000
a year, says Gary Bullen, a tobacco economics specialist
at the Department of Agriculture and Resources Economics
at North Carolina State University in Raleigh. Fifty
acres of tobacco is enough to support a family,
he says. There have not been many crops anybody
can say that about. The flue-cured areas east
and west of Danville typically have allotments of from
50 to 100 acres. Such farmers can net up to $100,000
a year. Air-cured tobacco brings less because quotas
have to be smaller due to the steep topography of the
mountains where the leaf is grown. With so much to lose,
those farmers and those dependent upon their crops are
in a tense holding pattern, waiting to see what Congress
will do.
Peanut
growers already feel the pain. On May 13, their quota
system that restricted supply to prop up prices came
to an end. They are struggling with nearly a 30 percent
drop in the government supported price this year for
their crops, which are primarily in-the-shell Virginia
peanuts. Theyre sold as gourmet items in gift
tins at tourist spots such as Colonial Williamsburg
and The Virginia Diner in Wakefield. Landowners are
looking at the end of the quota system that allowed
them to charge at least double rent for land that carried
a peanut quota with it. The federal government is now
buying up quotas at 55 cents per pound.
Just
as with tobacco growers, some peanut farmers who held
those quotas have stopped farming, often renting out
their quotas or passing them to relatives, which led
to fewer farmers actually working the fields. We
have 1,500 peanut farmers in Virginia, but we have several
thousand landowners, says Russell Schools, executive
secretary for the Virginia Peanut Growers Association.
We have four or five times as many landowners
as we have farmers.
The
quota and price support system meant farmers would get
a guaranteed income averaging around $610 a ton
over the past several years. That translates to a gross
of about $1,000 an acre, according to Wes Alexander,
a Virginia Tech extension agent in Southampton County.
Thats considerably more than the $480 per acre
averaged by cotton growers, and four to five times more
than what corn growers ($250 per acre) and soybean ($200
per acre) growers get. Even when the $500 per-acre cost
is factored in for peanut farmers, the crop can still
be a veritable cash cow for those who grow it. That
ended this year, Schools says, when Congress ended peanut
quotas, although peanut growers are being propped up
by other means.
As
of the spring, landowners who are not actively farming
will lose their quotas. The federal government is compensating
those landowners at 55-cent-per-quota pound payable
in a lump sump or spread out evenly over five years
quota holders choice. In 2003 the farmers
holding a growing base will have to assign that base
to a piece of land which means the value of the
base will again belong to landowners, not farmers. This
is another blunder that Congress made, says Billy
Bain, a peanut farmer in Dinwiddie County who is also
serving as president of the Virginia Peanut Growers
Association. Congress
wrote the bill as if every farmer owned the land he
farmed. Bain, like many farmers, rents most of
the land he works. I farm 3,000 acres, but only
275 is the family farm. The rest of the land he
leases and Bain says that not only will farmers take
a hit in the pocketbook, but landowners will as well.
Last year we had 75,000 acres planted in peanuts,
he says. Because farmers knew changes were coming, the
total acreage dropped to 56,000 this year in Virginia,
and the number may trickle to nearly nothing in coming
years.
Already,
Birdsong Peanuts, one of the largest peanut shellers
in the nation, has suspended operations at its shelling
plant in Franklin and will eventually consolidate that
work with another one of its plants in Suffolk
costing the town about 75 jobs. County agent Alexander
predicts that at least two of the 10 farm equipment
suppliers in Southampton County will go out of business.
Southampton
and the other peanut-growing communities will suffer
with the changes in the industry. In addition to the
closing at Birdsong, there are rumors of other closings
and plant sales. I think thats going to
change the landscape of what the area looks like,
says Teresa Beale, an official at the Southampton County
Chamber of Commerce.
What
will be seen instead of acres of peanuts are For
Sale signs. There are several counties,
in particular Southampton County, that are principally
rural in nature next to a very, very heavily urbanized
area, says Jim Pease, an economist with the Virginia
Extension Service at Virginia Tech. The income
that is being produced for farm families from peanut
production is one of the reasons that county has been
able to maintain its rural nature. The decline in profitability
is going to put much more pressure on the farmland
down there to be sold for housing.
In
the tiny town of Capron, in Southampton County, already
one giant land for sale for development
sign has cropped up near the Virginia Peanut Growers
Association office, where Schools is based. The sign
sits alone, surrounded by a field full of peanuts. Schools
says that if people start buying land to build houses,
values could eventually climb, making it more difficult
for peanut farmers to afford to stay in business. Shoving
them out could be affluent Yuppies from Tidewater who
might want a 60-acre farm where they could relax on
weekends.
As
well-heeled professionals move in, it doesnt necessarily
mean that peanut products will become scarce on grocery
shelves. Besides imports of lesser-type peanuts from
India, China and Argentina, which offer tough competition,
Virginia faces competition from South Carolina, Georgia
and Texas. Peanuts in Virginia are grown in a relatively
small area the states most southern tier
because it has the right type of sandy soil and
the necessary long, hot growing season. Georgia and
South Carolina have similar growing conditions and abundant
land more than is being used and easy
access to water for irrigation. Because of problems
with insects, water and soil, Virginia peanut farmers
face higher costs. With quotas gone, other states have
a built-in advantage in production costs.
While
the near-term future is obvious for peanut farmers,
tobacco farmers are still in the dark. The tobacco industry
has been taking a beating for years because of health
risks and stronger foreign competition. These factors
have helped mount political support to curtail tobacco
quotas. Growers are feeling the pinch. For example,
Haywood J. Hamlet, general manager for Dark Tobacco
Sales Cooperative and the Sun-Cured Tobacco Marketing
Cooperative, both based in Farmville, saw the quota
for the two types of tobacco he handles cut 42 percent
this year, down to 1.5 million pounds.
Hes
not alone. Stan Duffer, secretary of the Virginia Bright
Flue-Cured Tobacco and Dark-Fired Tobacco boards, saw
his much larger operation take even bigger hits. His
quota for flue-cured tobacco this year is 51.9 million
pounds, while the quota for burley stands at 12.1. Both
numbers represent a major drop. In 1998, the quota
for flu-cured tobacco was 72.5 million pounds,
he said. In 1997, it was 86.8 million pounds.
The quota for Burley that same year was 26.4 million
pounds.
That
trend, both say, will most likely continue, prompting
a continued move by several tobacco state congressmen
for a federal buyout of the quota system. Under proposals
being considered in Washington, owners of government
allotments would get anywhere from $8 to $12 per pound
in exchange for their quotas. Farmers leasing the quotas
could get as much as $4 per pound. Bullen, at N.C. State,
says a typical yield of tobacco is roughly 2,300 pounds
per acre meaning a farmer opting for a buyout
proposal of $4 per pound would get nearly $9,200 per
acre. A non-farming quota holder could see double or
triple that.
The
main sticking point is who will pick up the buyouts
tab. In the case of goobers, it should cost the federal
government $1.3 billion, not exactly peanuts. Still,
that figure pales in comparison to the vastly more expensive
tobacco buyout proposals. Most estimates put the price
tag at $16 to $20 billion. The buyout program could
be paid from a new fee levied on cigarette manufacturers,
presumably based on the savings they will enjoy once
quotas are eliminated. At a congressional hearing in
September, Philip Morris USA CEO Michael Szymanczyk
said the only way to get approval for a buyout plan
is for manufacturers to foot the bill. Officials from
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Holdings Inc. and Lorillard Tobacco
Co., however, say they do not want to pay for a buyout.
Another
sticking point is regulation by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration. If this proceeds, nicotine-packed tobacco
would be reviewed and regulated by the FDA as a drug,
although it is uncertain what this might mean for growers.
Says one lawyer: It could be something as simple
as having to fill out paperwork, or it could mean something
as absurd as having to put tobacco plants through performance
tests
similar to medical companies testing drugs.
Big Tobacco is split on FDA regulation. Philip Morris
supports a bill introduced by Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va.,
and Rep. Mike McIntyre, D-N.C., which calls for FDA
approval of tobacco products. Philip Morris contends
such regulation will bring stability to the industry.
R.J. Reynolds and Lorillard oppose such regulation.
FDA
regulation of tobacco, says economist Bullen, is almost
a certainty. Cigarette executives such as those from
Philip Morris support FDA regulation, believing that
they may have a hand in setting review standards for
the leaf. Others opposing it fear it will solidify Philip
Morris domination of the existing market. Philip
Morris has about 70 percent of the domestic market.
Such
uncertainties have beset Virginias tobacco growers
ever since the Surgeon General declared cigarettes health
risks back in the 1960s. Even though big cigarette companies
have continued to prosper, Virginia growers and related
businesses have seen their enterprises contract. Danville,
for example, once had 17 tobacco auction houses and
now has just one (see sidebar).
Already
many tobacco companies have begun bypassing the old
tobacco auctions, contracting directly with farmers
instead. Tobacco companies sometimes pay slightly more
than the government-supported prices for direct contract
purchases. They (tobacco companies) can control
quality better through contract purchases, says
economist Bullen. Typically, contracts have the company
paying the farmer a specified per-pound rate, but only
if the tobacco is a certain level of quality. Bullen
says that could be good news for the farmer. It is an
incentive to do whatever necessary to make sure the
leaf meets the highest quality levels and to beat competition
from leaf growers in China, India, Brazil and Turkey.
Many
of the Virginia communities where auction houses once
stood have moved on, turning to other agriculture or
business enterprises to fuel their economies. Although
these communities still stand to see their economies
affected by any change in the tobacco quota system,
Bullen says the gradual decline in quotas has made tobacco
a smaller and smaller part of the local economies. Over
the years they have already turned to alternative operations.
They have started chicken and turkey-raising operations,
turned to other sources of income.
And
outside of Virginia? Bullen says the story in North
Carolina is the same. Even in the large tobacco-farming
operations in the Piedmont farmers have been developing
other operations, such as chicken and turkey farms,
to take the place of declining tobacco revenue. Some
states, such as Kentucky, might even benefit from the
changes. Bullen says that the burley farmers in North
Carolina and Virginia may find it cost prohibitive to
continue growing since they are already limited by topography.
Air-cured leaf growers in Western Kentucky, where flatter
land makes for larger farms, might gobble up the allotments
given up by their Old Dominion and Tar Heel counterparts.
Whatever changes await tobacco farmers, and the related
local businesses in Virginia, those changes probably
wont take effect until at least next year. This
seasons tobacco harvest is in, and Congress, loath
to act on such a high-dollar proposition before this
years elections, most likely wont take up
the issue until the next session. Until then the farmers
will wait and work, planning next years crops
and hoping that whatever Congress does will let most
of them stay in business.
Despite
the health risks, a Virginia without tobacco is a jarring
thought since the leaf has played such a huge role in
the states economic history for four centuries.
Ditto peanuts. The crunchy legume has come to reflect
the Virginia persona. In fact, Planters Peanuts, one
of the best-known brands, was founded in Suffolk by
Amadeo Obici, an Italian immigrant, in the early 1900s.
Although Planters was long ago sold and moved from Virginia,
its legacy remains a trust left by Obici benefits
the community and a major hospital in Suffolk is named
for Obicis wife. But farmers and others dependent
upon peanuts and tobacco arent comforted by nostalgia
right now. They are worried about the devastating effects
these changes are having on their lives.
Return
to Virginia Business - November 2002
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