Agricultural subsidies are widespread worldwide governmental supports / Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
U.S. agricultural subsidies are the result of the Great Depression / Daniel Imhoff
U.S. agricultural subsidies are the result of a wide variety of government programs / Chris Edwards
Agricultural subsidies are a response to low prices / Daryll E. Ray, Daniel G. De La Torre Ugarte, and Kelly J. Tiller
Agricultural subsidies cause dumping in developing countries / Claire Godfrey
Agricultural subsidies are not the cause of dumping in developing countries / Sophia Murphy, Ben Lilliston, and Mary Beth Lake
Agricultural subsidies harm the poor in developing countries / Per Pinstrup-Andersen
Agricultural subsidies benefit the least developed countries / Arvind Panagariya
Agricultural subsidies encourage the overproduction of unhealthy food / Amy Frykholm
Agricultural subsidies worsen the global food shortage crisis / Washington Times
U.S. agricultural subsidies should be eliminated / Daniel Griswold, Stephen Slivinski, and Christopher Preble
Eliminating U.S. agricultural subsidies is not a good solution / Tom Philpott
U.S. farmers do not need agricultural subsidies to survive / Brian M. Riedl
Some U.S. farmers say they need agricultural subsidies to survive / Bruce Hight
Agricultural subsidies are not necessary and should be eliminated / Dean Kleckner
Agricultural subsidies are needed to protect food and local communities / Anuradha Mittal
To ensure quality food, current agricultural subsidies need to be eliminated / Michael Pollan
To end global poverty, it is not enough to eliminate agricultural subsidies / Sophia Murphy
Internal food security is needed to deal with the global food crisis / Thomas Dobbs
Agricultural policies need to support local control / Corrina Steward
Safety nets are a better alternative to agricultural subsidies / Britt Lundgren
Instead of funding agricultural subsidies, resources should be used for world hunger / Kamal Nath.