Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 35— - AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT ACT OF 1938 › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - LOANS, PARITY PAYMENTS, CONSUMER SAFEGUARDS, MARKETING QUOTAS, AND MARKETING CERTIFICATES › Part Part B— - Marketing Quotas › Subpart subpart iv— - marketing quotas—cotton › § 1350
The Secretary must set a national base acreage allotment for each upland cotton crop from 1971 through 1977 and must announce it by November 15 of the year before it starts. The number of acres is set so expected yield will meet estimated domestic cotton use for the marketing year, and the Secretary can add up to 25% more if needed to meet the national production goal. The 1971 allotment is fixed at 11,500,000 acres. For 1972–1977 the Secretary sets the amount needed to keep supplies adequate. For 1974–1977 the allotment cannot be less than 11,000,000 acres. The national allotment is divided to States based on acres planted in the five years before the year the national production goal is set, with adjustments for bad weather or disasters. States divide their share to counties the same way. State committees may hold back up to 2% for county adjustments. Counties divide their share to established cotton farms using the prior year’s farm base (1971 uses the 1970 farm allotment). County committees may reserve up to 10% to give to farms that did not plant recently, to correct unfairness, or to help small or troubled farms; reserves cannot reward new land brought into production after November 30, 1970. If a farm plants less than its base, its base is cut for the next year by the same percent, but not more than 20%; planting at least 90% counts as full. Acres not planted because of drought or other disasters count as planted. If a farm plants no cotton for three years, it loses its base. From 1971–1977 a farm may voluntarily give up base acres and the county or State may reassign them; any farm getting base acres by transfer, sale, or release must follow the set-aside rules. In disaster years the Secretary may allow temporary transfers of acreage to other farms where the original producers will share in the crop; transferred acres are treated as planted on the original farm for future allotments.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 1350
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73