94-10482. 1994 Marketing Quota and Price Support for Burley Tobacco  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 84 (Tuesday, May 3, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-10482]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: May 3, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service
    
    7 CFR Part 723
    
    Commodity Credit Corporation
    
    7 CFR Part 1464
    
    RIN 0560-AD25
    
     
    
    1994 Marketing Quota and Price Support for Burley Tobacco
    
    AGENCIES: Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service and 
    Commodity Credit Corporation, USDA.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The purpose of this final rule is to codify determinations 
    made by the Secretary of Agriculture (Secretary) with respect to the 
    1994 crop of burley tobacco. In accordance with the Agricultural 
    Adjustment Act of 1938 (1938 Act), as amended, the Secretary determined 
    the 1994 marketing quota for burley tobacco to be 542.7 million pounds. 
    In accordance with the Agricultural Act of 1949 (1949 Act), as amended, 
    the Secretary determined the 1994 price support level to be 171.4 cents 
    per pound.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: February 1, 1994.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert L. Tarczy, Agricultural 
    Economist, Tobacco and Peanuts Analysis Division, Agricultural 
    Stabilization and Conservation Service (ASCS), United States Department 
    of Agriculture (USDA), room 3736, South Building, P.O. Box 2415, 
    Washington, DC 20013-2415, telephone 202-720-8839.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        This final rule is issued in conformance with Executive Order 
    12866. Based on information compiled by USDA, it has been determined 
    that this final rule:
        (1) Would have an annual effect on the economy of less than $100 
    million;
        (2) Would not adversely affect in a material way the economy, a 
    sector of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the 
    environment, public health or safety, or State, local, or tribal 
    governments or communities;
        (3) Would not create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere 
    with an action taken or planned by another agency;
        (4) Would not materially alter the budgetary impact of 
    entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan programs or rights and 
    obligations of recipients thereof; and
        (5) Would not raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of 
    legal mandates, the President's priorities, or principles set forth in 
    Executive Order 12866.
    
    Final Regulatory Impact Analysis
    
        A final regulatory impact analysis describing the impact of the 
    established quota and support level is available on request from Robert 
    L. Tarczy.
    
    Executive Order 12778
    
        This final rule has been reviewed in accordance with Executive 
    Order 12778, Civil Justice Reform. The provisions of this rule do not 
    preempt State laws, are not retroactive, and do not involve 
    administrative appeals.
    
    Federal Assistance Program
    
        The title and number of the Federal Assistance Program, as found in 
    the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance, to which this rule applies 
    are: Commodity Loans and Purchases--10.051.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        It has been determined that the Regulatory Flexibility Act is not 
    applicable to this final rule since neither ASCS nor the Commodity 
    Credit Corporation is required by 5 U.S.C 553 or any other provision of 
    law to publish a notice of proposed rulemaking with respect to the 
    subject matter of this rule.
    
    Executive Order 12372
    
        This activity is not subject to the provisions of Executive Order 
    12372 which requires intergovernmental consultation with State and 
    local officials. See the Notice related to 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V, 
    published at 48 FR 29115 (June 24, 1983).
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The amendments to 7 CFR parts 723 and 1464 set forth in this final 
    rule do not contain any new or revised information collection 
    requirements that require clearance through the Office of Management 
    and Budget under the provisions of 44 U.S.C. chapter 35.
    
    Statutory Background
    
        This rule is issued pursuant to the provisions of the 1938 Act and 
    the 1949 Act. Section 1108(c) of Public Law. 99-272 provides that the 
    determinations made in this rule are not subject to the provisions for 
    public participation in rulemaking contained in 5 U.S.C. 553 or in any 
    directive of the Secretary.
        On February 1, 1994, the Secretary announced the national marketing 
    quota and price support level for the 1994 crop of burley tobacco.
    
    Marketing Quota
    
        Section 319(c)(3)(A)(B) of the 1938 Act provides, in part, that the 
    national marketing quota for a marketing year for burley tobacco is the 
    quantity of such tobacco that is not more than 103 percent nor less 
    than 97 percent of the total of: (1) The amount of burley tobacco that 
    domestic manufacturers of cigarettes estimate they intend to purchase 
    on U.S. auction markets or from producers, (2) the average quantity 
    exported annually from the U.S. during the three marketing years 
    immediately preceding the marketing year for which the determination is 
    being made, and (3) the quantity, if any, that the Secretary, in the 
    Secretary's discretion, determines necessary to adjust loan stocks to 
    the reserve stock level. However, any downward adjustment in such loan 
    inventories may not exceed the greater of 35 million pounds or 50 
    percent of the amount which the loan inventories exceed the reserve 
    stock level.
        Section 319(c)(3)(C) further provides that, with respect to the 
    1990 through 1994 marketing years, any reduction in the national 
    marketing quota being determined shall not exceed 10 percent of the 
    previous year's national marketing quota. The reserve stock level is 
    defined in section 301(b)(14)(D) of the 1938 Act as the greater of 50 
    million pounds or 15 percent of the national marketing quota for burley 
    tobacco for the marketing year immediately preceding the marketing year 
    for which the level is being determined.
        Section 320A of the 1938 Act provides that all domestic 
    manufacturers of cigarettes with more than 1 percent of U.S. cigarette 
    production and sales shall submit to the Secretary a statement of 
    purchase intentions for the 1994 crop of burley tobacco by January 15, 
    1994. Six such manufacturers were required to submit such a statement 
    for the 1994 crop and the total of their intended purchases for the 
    1994 crop is 324.0 million pounds. The three-year average of exports is 
    183.8 million pounds.
        The national marketing quota for the 1993 crop year was 603.0 
    million pounds (58 FR 36857). Thus, in accordance with section 
    301(b)(14)(D), the reserve stock level for use in determining the 1994 
    marketing quota for burley tobacco is 90.5 million pounds.
        On January 21, 1994, USDA projected that the loan coops would have 
    in their inventories 420.5 million pounds of burley tobacco (excluding 
    pre-1985 stocks committed to be purchased by manufacturers and covered 
    by deferred sales). Accordingly, the adjustment to maintain loan stocks 
    at the reserve supply level is a decrease of 165.0 million pounds.
        The total of the three marketing quota components for the 1994-95 
    marketing year is 342.8 million pounds. However, the 1994 national 
    marketing quota cannot be less than 90 percent of 1993's quota. 
    Accordingly, the national marketing quota for the marketing year 
    beginning October 1, 1994, for burley tobacco is 542.7 million pounds.
        In accordance with section 317(e) of the 1938 Act, the Secretary is 
    authorized to establish a national reserve from the national acreage 
    allotment in an amount equivalent to not more than 1 percent of the 
    national poundage quota for the purpose of making corrections in farm 
    acreage allotments, adjusting for inequities, and for establishing 
    allotments for new farms. The Secretary has determined that a national 
    reserve for the 1994 crop of burley tobacco of 1,862,367 pounds is 
    adequate for these purposes. In setting farm quotas for the 1994 burley 
    crop, it was also determined based on past practice that a factor of 
    0.90 would be used to adjust preliminary farm quotas to reach the 
    national poundage quota.
    
    Price Support
    
        Price support is required to be made available for each crop of a 
    kind of tobacco for which quotas are in effect, or for which marketing 
    quotas have not been disapproved by producers, at a level determined in 
    accordance with a formula prescribed in section 106 of the 1949 Act.
        With respect to the 1994 crop of burley tobacco, the level of 
    support is determined in accordance with sections 106(d) and (f) of the 
    1949 Act. Section 106(f)(7)(A) of the 1949 Act provides that the level 
    of support for the 1994 crop of burley tobacco shall be:
        (1) The level, in cents per pound, at which the 1993 crop of burley 
    tobacco was supported, plus or minus, respectively,
        (2) An adjustment of not less than 65 percent nor more than 100 
    percent of the total, as determined by the Secretary after taking into 
    consideration the supply of the kind of tobacco involved in relation to 
    demand, of:
        (A) 66.7 percent of the amount by which:
        (I) The average price received by producers for burley tobacco on 
    the United States auction markets, as determined by the Secretary, 
    during the 5 marketing years immediately preceding the marketing year 
    for which the determination is being made, excluding the year in which 
    the average price was the highest and the year in which the average 
    price was the lowest in such period, is greater or less than:
        (II) The average price received by producers for burley tobacco on 
    the United States auction markets, as determined by the Secretary, 
    during the 5 marketing years immediately preceding the marketing year 
    prior to the marketing year for which the determination is being made, 
    excluding the year in which the average price was the highest and the 
    year in which the average price was the lowest in such period; and
        (B) 33.3 percent of the change, expressed as a cost per pound of 
    tobacco, in the index of prices paid by the tobacco producers from 
    January 1 to December 31 of the calendar year immediately preceding the 
    year in which the determination is made.
        The difference between the two 5-year averages (i.e., the 
    difference between (A) (I) and (II)) is 4.7 cents per pound. The 
    difference in the cost index from January 1 to December 31, 1993, is 
    also 4.7 cents per pound. Applying these components to the price 
    support formula (4.7 cents per pound, two-thirds weight; 4.7 cents per 
    pound, one-third weight) results in a weighted total of 4.7 cents per 
    pound. As indicated, section 106 provides that the Secretary may, on 
    the basis of supply and demand conditions, limit the change in the 
    price support level to no less than 65 percent of that amount. In order 
    to remain competitive in foreign and domestic markets, the Secretary 
    used his discretion to limit the increase to 65 percent of the maximum 
    allowable increase. Accordingly, the 1994 crop of burley tobacco will 
    be supported at 171.4 cents per pound, 3.1 cents higher than in 1993.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    7 CFR Part 723
    
        Acreage allotments, Marketing quotas, Penalties, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements, Tobacco.
    
    7 CFR Part 1464
    
        Loan programs--agriculture, Price support programs, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements, Tobacco, Warehouses.
    
        Accordingly, 7 CFR parts 723 and 1464 are amended as follows:
    
    PART 723--TOBACCO
    
        1. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 723 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1301, 1311-1314, 1314-1, 1314c, 1314d, 
    1314f, 1314h, 1315, 1316, 1363, 1372-75, 1377-1379, 1421, 1445-1, 
    and 1445-2.
    
        2. Section 723.112 is amended by:
        A. Redesignating existing text as paragraph (a), and
        B. Adding paragraph (b) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 723.112  Burley (type 31) tobacco.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) The 1994-crop national marketing quota is 542.7 million pounds.
    
    PART 1464--TOBACCO
    
        3. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 1464 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1421, 1423, 1441, 1445, 1445-1 and 1445-2; 
    15 U.S.C. 714b and 714c.
    
        4. Section 1464.19 is amended by:
        A. Redesignating existing text as paragraph (a), and
        B. Adding paragraph (b) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1464.19  Burley (type 31) tobacco.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) The 1994-crop national price support level is 171.4 cents per 
    pound.
    
        Signed at Washington, DC, on April 22, 1994.
    Bruce R. Weber,
    Acting Administrator, Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation 
    Service and Executive Vice President, Commodity Credit Corporation.
    [FR Doc. 94-10482 Filed 5-2-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3410-05-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
05/03/1994
Department:
Commodity Credit Corporation
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
94-10482
Dates:
February 1, 1994.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: May 3, 1994
RINs:
0560-AD25
CFR: (2)
7 CFR 723.112
7 CFR 1464.19