Direct payments are farm program payments that are based on
historical cropping patterns of major commodities, or "base acres,"
with per-acre rates fixed in legislation and not linked to current
production or market prices. Direct payments per acre vary
significantly by commodity. In 2008, rice and peanuts received the
largest direct payments per acre ($96.25 and $45.85,
respectively). Rice base acres were predominant in a few
counties along the Gulf Coast and in the Pacific region, while
peanut base acres were concentrated in the Southeast. Corn, wheat,
and soybeans accounted for more than 80 percent of total base acres
in 2008, but received lower direct payments per acre ($24.39 per
acre, $15.21 per acre, and $11.54 per acre, respectively). Corn
base acres dominated in the Corn Belt, Lake States, the Northeast
and Appalachia while wheat base acres were prevalent in the
Northern and Southern Plains as well as parts of the Mountain
region. This chart is found in the ERS report, Potential Farm-Level
Effects of Eliminating Direct Payments, EIB-103,
November 2012.