Ethanol is a Budget Buster

By William Yeatman
July 31, 2007, Competitive Enterprise Institute
http://www.cei.org/gencon/004,06075.cfm

Increased Mandate and Subsidies Would Raise Food Prices and Strain Federal Budget

News story after news story highlights the impact of ethanol mandates on food prices in grocery stores across America. The story line is familiar. Ethanol is made from corn, and the new federal ethanol mandate is raising demand for corn and thereby exerting an upwards pressure on the price of corn. Costlier corn, in turn, affects the price of a wide variety of groceries. For some products, like soda, corn syrup is a direct input, and higher corn prices are raising production costs. Corn is also a major feedstock for cattle, hogs, and chickens, so higher corn prices are again raising production costs for a wide array of products, such as milk, eggs, cheese, beef, pork, and poultry. 

   
   
   
   
     
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
     

 

Higher corn prices are also encouraging many farmers to plant more acres of corn, which means fewer acres of soybeans, other grains, and even cotton. Lower supplies of these commodities are already reverberating throughout the economy, with reports, for example, of higher beer prices.  These impacts will intensify if Congress raises the current ethanol mandate of 7.5 billion gallons to 36 billion gallons.

 

The link between ethanol mandates and higher food prices has been demonstrated amply in the media. What has received scant media attention is the fact that the increased ethanol mandate proposed by President Bush, passed by the Senate, and now before the House, is a budget buster; it would cost American taxpayers almost a quarter trillion dollars or more over the next 15 years. Given that entitlement spending is set to skyrocket as baby boomers retire, the enormous costs of ethanol mandates threaten to become an unmanageable budget liability.