This
significant step continues USDA's commitment to keeping farmers
and ranchers financially viable and support for agricultural
communities.
Over the past two years, USDA acted swiftly to assist borrowers
in retaining their land and continuing their agricultural
operations. Since President Biden signed the Inflation Reduction
Act into law in August 2022, the USDA has provided approximately
$2.4 billion in assistance to more than 43,900 distressed
borrowers.
Building on this momentum, USDA is announcing an estimated
additional $250 million in assistance to approximately 4,650
distressed direct and guaranteed farm loan borrowers. This
includes approximately $235 million in assistance for an
estimated 4,485 delinquent direct and guaranteed borrowers who
have not received prior IRA 22006 assistance, and approximately
$15 million in assistance for an estimated 165 direct and
guaranteed borrowers with Shared Appreciation Agreements.
Distressed FSA borrowers with loans secured by real estate must
sign a Shared Appreciation Agreement when they accept loan
servicing actions that write down a portion of their direct or
guaranteed debt. FSA is required to recapture a portion of that
write-down if the property value of the real estate security
increases when the agreement matures. Borrowers are required to
either repay this amount or have it converted into an
interest-accruing repayment agreement. As loan servicing actions
that were paused due to the COVID-19 pandemic resume, such as
Shared Appreciation Agreement recaptures, this added debt burden
could severely impact borrowers who are already struggling.
How Payments are Made
For direct borrower delinquency assistance, FSA will make an
automatic payment in the amount of any outstanding
delinquencies, as of September 30, 2024, on qualifying direct
borrower loans that are one or more days delinquent, as of that
date, provided those borrowers have not received prior Section
22006 assistance that was applied to reduce a direct FSA loan
balance (excluding assistance for Disaster Set-Asides and
Emergency Loans).
For guaranteed borrower delinquency payments, FSA will mail via
check an automatic payment in the amount of any outstanding
delinquencies, as of September 30, 2024, on qualifying
guaranteed loans that are 30 or more days delinquent, as of that
date, provided those borrowers have not received prior Section
22006 guaranteed loan assistance. Guaranteed loan borrowers are
not considered to be in monetary default until 30 days past due.
This assistance will be in the form of a United States
Department of the Treasury check that is jointly payable to the
borrower and the lender.
For borrowers receiving assistance on their Shared Appreciation
Agreements, a payment will be made to resolve outstanding
amortized repayment agreements and recapture amounts owed to FSA
which have matured as of September 30, 2024. Borrowers whose
Shared Appreciation Agreements have not matured as of September
30, 2024, will be contacted by FSA and provided an opportunity
to request that FSA calculate a partial recapture and Shared
Appreciation Agreement assistance offer.
Shared Appreciation Agreement assistance amounts will be
calculated as follows:
For borrowers whose Shared Appreciation Agreement had previously
matured and the receivable owed was converted into a Shared
Appreciation Payment Agreement prior to September 30, 2024,
Shared Appreciation Agreement assistance will be equal to the
total amount of outstanding principal and interest owed on the
payment agreement of September 30, 2024.
For Shared Appreciation Agreements that have reached their
maturity date, but FSA has not yet calculated recapture due, FSA
will complete required appraisals and calculate the recapture
due as of the date of the Shared Appreciation Agreement
maturity. Shared Appreciation Agreement assistance will be equal
to the amount of calculated recapture.
For Shared Appreciation Agreements that have not yet matured,
FSA will be in contact with borrowers and will provide the
option to request Shared Appreciation Agreement payment
assistance. Borrowers must consent to FSA completing an
appraisal on real estate security prior to March 31, 2025. FSA
will calculate the amount of recapture that would be due as if
the Shared Appreciation Agreement matured as of September 30,
2024, and the borrower may accept that payment as a partial
payment towards the receivable due at final maturity. Borrowers
may still owe additional recapture at final Shared Appreciation
Agreement maturity.
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As with previous rounds of Section 22006 of the
Inflation Reduction Act assistance, direct and guaranteed borrowers
receiving assistance under any category above will receive a letter
from FSA explaining the payment they received. Guaranteed borrowers
will receive instructions to make an appointment with their lender
to process the payment and apply it to their qualifying guaranteed
loan accounts. FSA will provide a letter to guaranteed lenders with
instructions for providing updated status reports.
Any distressed direct and guaranteed borrowers who qualify for these
forms of assistance and are currently in bankruptcy will be
addressed using the same case-by-case review process announced in
October 2022 for complex cases.
Impact of Section 22006 of the Inflation Reduction Act Assistance
USDA conducted an Economic Impact Analysis on the $2.2 billion in
payments previously provided to distressed Farm Loan Program
borrowers through Section 22006 of the Inflation Reduction Act. Key
findings show these payments will:
Generate or support nearly 49,000 jobs.
Increase household income by $2.471 billion.
Contribute $3.556 billion to the United States gross domestic
product.
Increase gross revenues from total sales of final goods and services
by $5.663 billion.
While the economic impacts of these payments will
diminish over time as the economy returns to a steady state, the
one-time payments are expected to strengthen local economies and
potentially improve resilience and growth prospects. View the
additional estimated economic impacts in this fact sheet.
Since fiscal year 2021, USDA foreclosures have significantly
decreased, with only 12 farm foreclosures initiated directly by FSA,
compared to a 10-year average of 51 annually. Chapter 12 farm
bankruptcies have dropped from an average of 493 annually to 139 in
2023. Inflation Reduction Act assistance has brought 1,904 farmers
facing foreclosure current and prevented the initiation of
foreclosures for 3,970 farmers. Around 82% of direct loan borrowers
who received assistance remain current on their loans.
Additional Farm Loan Programs Improvements
FSA recently announced significant changes to Farm Loan Programs
through the Enhancing Program Access and Delivery for Farm Loans
rule. These policy changes are designed to expand opportunities for
borrowers to increase profitability and be better prepared to make
strategic investments in the enhancement or expansion of their
agricultural operations.
FSA also has a significant initiative underway to streamline and
automate the Farm Loan Program customer-facing business process. FSA
has made several impactful improvements including:
The Loan Assistance Tool that provides customers with an interactive
online, step-by-step guide to identifying the direct loan products
that may be a fit for their business needs and to understanding the
application process.
The Online Loan Application, an interactive, guided application that
is paperless and provides helpful features including an electronic
signature option, the ability to attach supporting documents such as
tax returns, complete a balance sheet and build a farm operating
plan.
An online direct loan repayment feature that relieves borrowers from
the necessity of calling, mailing, or visiting a local USDA Service
Center to pay a loan installment.
A simplified direct loan paper application, reduced from 29 pages to
13 pages.
A new educational hub with farm loan resources and videos.
The Distressed Borrowers Assistance Network, a national initiative
aimed at providing personalized support to financially distressed
farmers and ranchers. The network connects borrowers with
individualized assistance to help them regain financial stability.
USDA encourages producers to reach out to their local FSA farm loan
staff to ensure they fully understand the wide range of loan and
servicing options available to assist with starting, expanding, or
maintaining their agricultural operation. To conduct business with
FSA, producers should contact their local USDA Service Center.
[Farm Service Agency]
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