Although the new farm bill won’t be passed until 2018, a number of producer groups are already holding informal meetings in Washington, DC and elsewhere throughout the country in an attempt to find a new consensus approach to legislation that dates back 100 years.When policymakers and stakeholders allude to “permanent law” in the farm bill debate, they are referring to the 1938 Agricultural Adjustment Act. However, the roots of the farm bill go back even further. In fact, this month could be considered its 100th anniversary based on passage of the 1916 Federal Farm Loan Act. That statute was updated seven years later in 1923, and then the Agricultural Marketing Act was passed in 1929. This was followed by adoption of the Agricultural Adjust...