The Department of Agriculture was made a Cabinet-level department in 1889. For many years, the secretary of agriculture supervised chiefs of bureaus of the department, as was the norm throughout the U.S. government. Subsequently, a single subcabinet position of assistant secretary was created. Over time, this position was upgraded to under secretary, under which in turn was a single assistant secretary. In 1953, Secretary
Ezra Taft Benson lobbied for the creation of additional assistant secretary positions, which Congress approved that summer. Two of these positions, the assistant secretary for the Foreign Agricultural Service and the assistant secretary for commodity marketing and adjustment, were merged in September 1953, and in December of that year the vacant position was designated as the assistant secretary for stabilization. Between 1953 and 1962, the responsibilities of today's under secretary for farm and foreign agricultural services were thus shared by two assistant secretaries, for "stabilization" and for "marketing and foreign agriculture". The former oversaw the Commodity Stabilization Service and its successors, including the
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, while the latter oversaw the
Agricultural Marketing Service and the
Foreign Agricultural Service. In 1963, the positions were reshuffled, with foreign agriculture (oversight of the Foreign Agricultural Service and the newly created International Agricultural Development Service) assigned to an assistant secretary for international affairs, and marketing and stabilization combined under an assistant secretary for marketing and consumer services. In 1969, responsibility for both foreign affairs and farm support (stabilization) programs was consolidated into a single position entitled the assistant secretary for international affairs and commodity programs, with marketing remaining under its own, separate assistant secretary. The
Agricultural Trade Act of 1978 upgraded the assistant secretary for international affairs and commodity programs to under secretary. At the time, it was the only under secretary-level subcabinet position in USDA, as the official previously called under secretary had been retitled as deputy secretary, in keeping with common U.S. government practice. Subsequent USDA reorganizations, notably that of 1994, upgraded most USDA subcabinet officials to under secretary status, however. Dorothy Jacobson, a longtime aide to
Orville Freeman, was the first woman appointed to one of these positions, in 1964. This made her the first woman to serve in a subcabinet position in USDA. Another former assistant secretary, James T. Ralph, was a figure in the
Billie Sol Estes scandal and was forced to leave federal service. This scandal led directly to the 1963 shakeup of USDA, a reassignment of responsibilities for oversight of commodity programs, and investigation of allegations of corrupt activities by state-level employees of the
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service. As trade in agricultural products continued to expand, and foreign markets became the primary destination for many U.S. grown commodities, there was increasing pressure to have a more visible member of USDA dedicated solely to expanding trade opportunities and resolving issues. Section 3208 of the Agricultural Act of 2014 mandated "The Secretary... shall propose a reorganization of international trade functions for imports and exports of the Department of Agriculture." Though enacted on February 7, 2014, the plan to formalize the reorganization was not announced until May 11, 2017. The plan put forth by USDA Secretary
Sonny Perdue dissolved the farm and foreign agricultural services mission area and created a new mission area for trade and foreign agricultural affairs, which houses the
Foreign Agricultural Service, and the farm production and conservation mission area, which contains the
Farm Service Agency,
Risk Management Agency, and
Natural Resources Conservation Service (previously a part of the natural resources and environment (NRE) mission area). ==Reporting officials==