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Abstract
The primary objective of this study is to answer two key questions regarding the U.S.
soybean checkoff program over time: (1) What have been the effects of the soybean checkoff
program on U.S. and world soybean and soybean product markets? (2) Has the soybean checkoff
program benefited soybean producers? To answer the first key question, the effects of the soybean
checkoff program on U.S. and foreign soybean, soybean meal, and soybean oil supplies,
demands, prices, and trade over the 1980/81 through 2006/07 time period are measured. Those
results are then used to answer the second question in a benefit-cost analysis of the soybean
checkoff program to measure the overall return to producers from soybean checkoff and related
expenditures over the years. In general, the study concludes that the expenditure of soybean
checkoff funds to invest in production research and to promote the demand for soybeans and
soybean products at home and abroad has been highly effective in enhancing the profitability,
competiveness, and size of the U.S. soybean industry since at least 1980/81.