Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 41— - FOOD FOR PEACE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - FARMER-TO-FARMER PROGRAM › § 1737
Creates a program called the John Ogonowski and Doug Bereuter Farmer-to-Farmer Program that lets the President set up volunteer technical exchanges between U.S. farm experts and farmers in developing countries, middle-income countries, emerging markets, sub-Saharan African countries, and Caribbean Basin countries. The goal is to raise food production, improve how food is distributed, and make farming and marketing work better. U.S. participants can include farmers, universities (including historically Black colleges and land-grant schools), private agribusinesses, grassroots groups, cooperative staff, and nonprofit farm groups. They may teach many practical topics, such as animal care, crop and fruit-and-vegetable growing, livestock, food processing and packaging, farm credit and marketing, seed and input choices, pest control and sanitation, equipment and irrigation use, fertilizer and soil treatment, and agricultural education. The program also supports strengthening cooperatives, sharing knowledge through cash or in-kind help, making grants or contracts with trusted partners, coordinating with other U.S. foreign-aid programs, and using local or foreign currencies earned in-country when possible. Lawmakers found that farmers in sub-Saharan Africa and the Caribbean need training in basic growing methods, pest control, recordkeeping, equipment care, village banking, risk insurance pilots, and marketing, and that U.S. farmers and banking/insurance experts can help. The program’s goals are to help small farms grow into agribusinesses by improving access to credit (village banking and pilot insurance), boost local food security and reduce hunger, teach groups who will pass on skills at home, and reach as many people as possible. For funding, for fiscal years 2008 through 2013 at least the greater of $10,000,000 or 0.5 percent of amounts made available for the chapter must be used for these programs, and for fiscal years 2014 through 2023 at least the greater of $15,000,000 or 0.6 percent must be used. At least 0.2 percent must go to programs in developing countries and at least 0.1 percent to programs in sub-Saharan African and Caribbean Basin countries. From fiscal years 2008 through 2023, up to $10,000,000 a year is authorized for sub-Saharan African and Caribbean Basin countries and $5,000,000 a year for other eligible countries, with no more than 5 percent of the sub-Saharan/Caribbean funds used for administration. The U.S. Agency for International Development must run a grant program for fiscal years 2019 through 2023 to support new partners, new volunteer models, ties to other U.S. programs, and more diverse participants, including land-grant colleges and cooperative extension.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 1737
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73