The Agricultural Marketing Act, enacted in 1929, was a legislative initiative designed to stabilize farm prices and promote cooperative marketing. It established the Federal Farm Board with a substantial revolving fund to provide loans to agricultural cooperatives, enabling them to manage surpluses and market their products more effectively. This aimed to minimize price fluctuations caused by overproduction, a persistent problem for farmers in the 1920s. These loans helped cooperatives purchase, store, and market agricultural commodities, intending to create more orderly marketing conditions.
This federal action was significant as a response to the economic hardships faced by American farmers following World War I. It represented an early attempt by the government to intervene directly in the agricultural sector to alleviate economic distress. Although the Act ultimately failed to achieve its goals of sustained price stabilization, due in part to the onset of the Great Depression and the limitations of the Federal Farm Board’s authority, it marked a turning point in the relationship between the government and agriculture. It highlighted the growing recognition of the need for federal intervention in managing agricultural markets and laid some of the groundwork for later, more comprehensive New Deal agricultural programs.