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Corn Subsidies** in Rice County, Minnesota totaled $102 million from 1995-2012.

Year   Subsidy Amount
1995 $3,579,565
1996 $2,421,226
1997 $3,732,342
1998 $6,895,632
1999 $10,285,944
2000 $9,564,751
2001 $7,215,910
2002 $2,877,621
2003 $4,064,234
2004 $5,020,654
2005 $13,214,088
2006 $7,338,562
2007 $4,327,850
2008 $4,593,840
2009 ** $4,405,808
2010 ** $4,035,446
2011 ** $5,510,634
2012 ** $3,121,831

1995-2010**$112,003,398
  • Deficiency Payments
  • Direct Payments (2003-2008) and Production Flexibility Contracts (1996-2002)
  • Estimated Direct Payments** (2009-2012)
  • Crop Insurance Premium Subsidies
  • Price Support Payments (Loan Deficiency, Marketing Loan Gains, and Certificates)
  • Counter-Cyclical Programs
  • Market Loss Assistance
  • Other Corn Programs

Programs included in corn subsidies**

Program Total Payments
1995-2012
Crop Ins. Premium Subsidy - Corn$20,745,686
Production Flexibility - Corn$20,446,336
Direct Payment - Corn$16,091,586
Loan Deficiency - Corn$16,088,365
Market Loss Assistance - Corn$10,962,471
Estimated Direct Payments 2009-2010** - Corn $4,284,136
Counter Cyclical Payment - Corn$6,489,628
Market Gains Farm - Corn$2,551,641
Advance Deficiency - Corn$1,172,468
Deficiency - Corn$924,341
Commodity Certificates - Corn$251,004
Market Gains Warehouse - Corn$27,106
Farm Storage - Corn$4,492
Loan Def. Refund - Corn$-16,778
** Crop totals are an estimate. In the data received by EWG for 2009-2011, USDA does not differentiate Direct Payments or Counter-Cyclical Payments by crop as in previous years. EWG allocated the region's Direct Payments by crop for the 2009-2011 calendar year using the proportion of that crop's Direct Payments in 2008. Number of recipients receiving Direct Payments for that crop were not estimated. Due to the way Counter Cyclical Payments are made - EWG was not able to allocate Counter Cyclical Payments to crops. Also included in the crop totals are the crop insurance premiums as reported by the USDA Risk Management Agency for that crop. The crop insurance premium is the amount of money that is calculated by USDA to make the program actuarially sound. Crop insurance premium subsidies are available at the county, state and national level.