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U.S. Farm Income Outlook for 2017

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. U.S. Farm Income Randy Schnepf Specialist in Agricultural Policy February 15, 201221, 2013 Congressional Research Service 7-5700 www.crs.gov R40152 CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress c11173008 . U.S. Farm Income Summary According to USDA’s Economic Research Service (ERS), national net farm income—a key indicator of U.S. farm well-being—is forecast at $91.7a record $128 billion in 2012, down $6.5 billion (6.5%) from the record total of $98.1 billion achieved in 2011. Record revenues from crop markets (forecast up 0.7%, from 2011’s record level), coupled with continued strength in livestock markets (down 0.1% from 2011’s record), are expected to be offset a 4% ($12.5 billion) increase in input costs to account for the lower forecast for overall net returns. The major drivers behind a second year of strong farm income projections are the outlook for near-record U.S. agricultural exports of $132 billion in 2012, following record exports in 2011 (projected at a record $136.3 billion), and continued strong crop prices driven in part by sustained demand from the U.S. corn ethanol industry. Market prices for major program crops for the 2011/12 marketing year have remained near record levels, and sustain a positive earnings outlook for most commodities, but especially for corn, cotton, and soybeans. Beef and broilers are expected to see record high prices in 2012 (up 9% and 7%, respectively), while egg and milk prices are projected to decline by over 8%. Government farm payments, although projected up 4% in 2012 at $11 billion, are expected to remain relatively small (second lowest total since 1997) as high commodity prices shut off payments under the price-contingent marketing loan and counter-cyclical payment programs. Farm production expenses are forecast up 4% to a record $334 billion in 2012, led by a surge in operating expenses and increasing outlays for crop insurance. Livestock producers face record costs for feed and near-record costs for replacement animals, which could diminish their net return prospects. Crop producers also are expected to confront record high costs for seed, fertilizer, and fuel. Farm asset values—which reflect farm investors’ and lenders’ expectations about long-term profitability of farm-sector investments—are expected to rise nearly 6% in 2012 to a record $2,474 billion for a 4th consecutive year of gains. Farm land cash markets in early 2012 suggest that land values will continue to see gains related to strong crop prices in 2012. Farm debt has been nearly stagnant since 2008. As a result, the farm debt-to-asset ratio has declined steadily since 2008 and is expected to fall to the lowest level on record in 2012 at 10.3%. These data suggest a strong financial position heading into 2012 for the agriculture sector as a whole relative to the rest of the U.S. economy. However, there is substantial regional variation. In general, the increase in expenses will affect livestock producers more harshly than crop producers. Cash grain farmers in the Corn Belt and Northern Plains are expected to experience a second year of record revenues. In contrast, livestock and poultry feeders are experiencing record high feed costs that have narrowed profit margins despite record high wholesale and retail prices for their end products. In addition, a severe drought in 2011 in the Southwest that extended into the Central Plains and the Southeast limited grazing opportunities and hay production for cattle ranchers in the affected regions and led to substantial herd liquidation. The lingering effects of the drought are expected to depress sales of many crops in 2012 through their negative impact on production. Eventual 2012 agricultural economic well-being will hinge greatly on spring crop planting and summer growing weather, as well as both domestic and international macroeconomic factors including economic growth and consumer demand. Congressional Research Service . U.S. Farm Income Contents Introduction...................................................................................................................................... 1 2012 Farm Income Forecast 2nd Highest on Record ........................................................................ 2 Market Overview....................................................................................................................... 6 U.S. Ethanol Policy Sets the Stage for Higher Commodity Prices ..................................... 6 Financial Crisis Stymies Growth in 2009............................................................................ 6 Economic Growth Restarts in 2010, Slows Again in 2011 ................................................. 6 Various Factors Will Influence 2012 Market Conditions .................................................... 7 Cash Receipts ............................................................................................................................ 7 Crops ................................................................................................................................... 9 Livestock ............................................................................................................................. 9 Government Payments............................................................................................................. 10 Production Expenses ............................................................................................................... 11 Agricultural Trade Outlook ..................................................................................................... 13 Long-Run Farm Income Projections to 2021................................................................................. 15 Farm Asset Values and Debt .......................................................................................................... 16 Average Farm Household Income ................................................................................................. 17 Figures Figure 1. Annual U.S. Farm Sector Nominal Income, 1960 to 2012F............................................. 3 Figure 2. Annual U.S. Farm Sector Inflation-Adjusted Income, 1960 to 2012F ............................. 3 Figure 3. Monthly Farm Prices for Major Field Crops, Nominal Dollars ....................................... 4 Figure 4. Monthly Farm Prices for Major Field Crops, Indexed Dollars ........................................ 4 Figure 5. Monthly Farm Prices for Major Livestock Products, Nominal Dollars ........................... 5 Figure 6. Monthly Farm Prices for Livestock Products, Indexed Dollars ....................................... 5 Figure 7. Farm Cash Receipts by Source, 1990 to 2012F ............................................................... 8 Figure 8. Crop Cash Receipts by Source, 2006 to 2012F................................................................ 8 Figure 9. U.S. Livestock Product Cash Receipts by Source, 2006 to 2012F................................... 9 Figure 10. U.S. Government Farm Support, Direct Outlays, 1996 to 2012F ................................ 10 Figure 11. Farm Cash Production Expenses by Source, 2006 to 2012F........................................ 12 Figure 12. U.S. Farm Gross Revenue, Production Expenses, and Net Income ............................. 12 Figure 13. U.S. Agricultural Trade Since 1940.............................................................................. 13 Figure 14. U.S. Agricultural Trade: Bulk vs. High-Value Shares .................................................. 14 Figure 15. U.S. Agricultural Export Value as Share of Total Gross Farm Income ........................ 14 Figure 16. USDA Long-Run Farm Income Projections, 2012-2021 ............................................. 15 Figure 17. U.S. Average Farm Land Values, 1985 to 2011F.......................................................... 16 Figure 18. U.S. Farm Debt-to-Asset Ratio Since 1960.................................................................. 17 Congressional Research Service . U.S. Farm Income Figure 19. U.S. Average Farm Household Income, On- and Off-Farm Sources, Since 1960 .................................................................................................................................. 18 Figure 20. Comparison of Farm to U.S. Average Household Income Since 1960 ........................ 18 Figure 21. Ratio of Farm to U.S. Average Household Income Since 1960 ................................... 19 Tables Table 1. Distribution of Farms and Value of Production by Farm Size, 2010 ............................... 19 Table 2. U.S. Crop and Livestock Revenue ($ Billions) by Source, 2007-2012F ......................... 20 Table 3. U.S. Farm Production Expenses ($ Billions) by Source, 2007-2012F............................. 21 Table 4. Annual U.S. Farm Income Since 2005............................................................................. 22 Table 5. Average Annual Income per U.S. Household, Farm versus All, 2004-2011F.................. 23 Table 6. Average Annual Farm Sector Debt-to-Asset Ratio, 2005-2012F..................................... 23 Table 7. U.S. Prices and Support Rates for Selected Farm Commodities Since 2006................... 24 Contacts Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 25 Congressional Research Service . U.S. Farm Income Introduction The U.S. farm sector is vast and varied. It encompasses production activities related to traditional field crops (such as corn, soybeans, wheat, and cotton), livestock and poultry products (including meat, dairy, and eggs), as well as fruits, tree nuts, and vegetables. In addition, U.S. agricultural output includes greenhouse and nursery products, forest products, custom work, machine hire, and other farm-related activities. The intensity and economic importance of each of these activities, as well as their underlying market structure and production processes, vary regionally based on the agro-climatic setting, market conditions, and other factors. As a result, farm income and rural economic conditions may vary substantially across the United States.1 However, this report focuses singularly on aggregate national net farm income and the farm debt-to-asset status 2013, up 14% from last year, and $10 billion above 2011’s previous record. In addition to near-record farm income, farm wealth is also at record levels. Farm asset values— which reflect farm investors’ and lenders’ expectations about long-term profitability of farmsector investments—are expected to rise nearly 8% in 2013 to a record $2,732 billion for a fifth consecutive year of gains. Farm land cash markets have continued to see gains related to strong crop prices in 2012. Since 2008, farm asset values are up 35% while farm debt has risen by only 15%. As a result, the farm debt-to-asset ratio has declined steadily since 2008 and is expected to fall to 10.2%, its lowest level since 1960. The 2013 outlook for a third year of strong farm income occurs in spite of slow growth in the domestic economy and the most severe and extensive drought in at least 25 years. A severe drought in 2012 destroyed or damaged a significant portion of the U.S. corn and soybean crops, with deleterious impacts on all U.S. livestock sectors—cattle, hogs, poultry, and dairy—as feed costs reached record levels. The drought’s eventual effect on food prices at the retail level will continue to be felt in 2013. Yet, drought-induced large increases in the value of 2012’s crops, plus substantial crop insurance indemnity payments, are expected to partially offset higher production expenditures for both crop and livestock activities. In general, a return to trend yields in 2013 (assuming normal weather) is expected to generate record-large harvests of major crops which, in turn, would likely benefit livestock producers in the second half of the year as crop prices are expected to decline from record-high levels. However, high feed costs could persist through at least the first half of the year. Cash grain farmers in the Corn Belt and Northern Plains are expected to experience a third year of nearrecord revenues as a return to trend yields would offset a substantial portion of the anticipated crop price decline. However, the expected increase in crop and total output in 2013 is also projected to lead to unusually large increases in marketing, storage, and transportation expenses and miscellaneous expenses. Government farm payments, at about $11 billion, are expected to remain relatively small in 2013 (third-lowest total since 1997) as high commodity prices continue to shut off payments under the price-contingent marketing loan and counter-cyclical payment programs. These data suggest a strong financial position heading into 2013 for the agricultural sector as a whole relative to the rest of the U.S. economy, but with substantial regional variation. The lingering effects of the drought are expected to spill over into 2013, when record-high market prices will likely motivate large feed grain and oilseed plantings. Eventual 2013 agricultural economic well-being will hinge greatly on spring crop planting and summer growing weather, as well as both domestic and international macroeconomic factors including economic growth and consumer demand. Congressional Research Service U.S. Farm Income Contents Introduction...................................................................................................................................... 1 Highlights of 2013 Farm Income Forecast ...................................................................................... 2 Recap of U.S. Agriculture in 2012 ............................................................................................ 4 Early Outlook for U.S. Agriculture for 2013 ............................................................................. 5 Cash Receipt Highlights .......................................................................................................... 12 Crop Highlights ................................................................................................................. 12 Livestock Highlights ......................................................................................................... 13 Government Payment Highlights ...................................................................................... 14 Production Expense Highlights ............................................................................................... 16 Agricultural Trade Outlook ..................................................................................................... 17 Long-Run Farm Income Projections to 2022................................................................................. 19 Farm Asset Values and Debt .......................................................................................................... 20 Average Farm Household Income ................................................................................................. 22 On-Farm vs. Off-Farm Income Shares .................................................................................... 22 U.S. vs. Farm Household Income ............................................................................................ 22 Farm Household Income by Sales Class ................................................................................. 24 Figures Figure 1. Annual U.S. Farm Sector Nominal Income, 1960 to 2013F............................................. 3 Figure 2. Annual U.S. Farm Sector Inflation-Adjusted Income, 1960 to 2013F ............................. 3 Figure 3. U.S. Farm Gross Revenue, Production Expenses, and Net Income ................................. 4 Figure 4. Widespread Drought Damaged 2012 Crop Output........................................................... 5 Figure 5. Drought Persists in Early 2013 for Plains States and Western Corn Belt......................... 6 Figure 6. U.S. Corn Stocks Tighten in 2012/2013 While Prices Rise ............................................. 7 Figure 7. U.S. Soybean Stocks Approach Historic Lows Relative to Use in 2012/2013................. 7 Figure 8. Monthly Farm Prices for Corn, Soybeans, and Wheat, Nominal Dollars ........................ 8 Figure 9. Monthly Farm Prices for Corn, Soybeans, and Wheat, Indexed Dollars ......................... 8 Figure 10. Monthly Farm Prices for Cotton and Rice, Nominal Dollars ......................................... 9 Figure 11. Monthly Farm Prices for Cotton and Rice, Indexed Dollars .......................................... 9 Figure 12. Monthly Farm Prices for Cattle and Milk, Nominal Dollars ........................................ 10 Figure 13. Monthly Farm Prices for Cattle and Milk, Indexed Dollars ......................................... 10 Figure 14. Monthly Farm Prices for Hogs and Broilers, Nominal Dollars.................................... 11 Figure 15. Monthly Farm Prices for Hogs and Broilers, Indexed Dollars ..................................... 11 Figure 16. Farm Cash Receipts by Source, 1990 to 2013F ........................................................... 12 Figure 17. Crop Cash Receipts by Source, 2007 to 2013F ............................................................ 13 Figure 18. U.S. Livestock Product Cash Receipts by Source, 2007 to 2013F ............................... 14 Figure 19. U.S. Government Farm Support, Direct Outlays, 1997 to 2013F ................................ 15 Congressional Research Service U.S. Farm Income Figure 20. Farm Cash Production Expenses by Source, 2007 to 2013F........................................ 16 Figure 21. U.S. Agricultural Trade Since 1970.............................................................................. 17 Figure 22. U.S. Agricultural Trade: Bulk vs. High-Value Shares .................................................. 18 Figure 23. U.S. Agricultural Export Value as Share of Gross Cash Income .................................. 19 Figure 24. USDA Long-Run Farm Income Projections, 2013-2022 ............................................. 20 Figure 25. U.S. Average Farm Land Values, 1985 to 2012F ......................................................... 21 Figure 26. U.S. Farm Debt-to-Asset Ratio Since 1960.................................................................. 22 Figure 27. U.S. Average Farm Household Income, On- and Off-Farm Sources, Since 1960 .................................................................................................................................. 23 Figure 28. Comparison of Farm to U.S. Average Household Income Since 1960 ........................ 23 Figure 29. Ratio of Farm to U.S. Average Household Income Since 1960 ................................... 24 Tables Table 1. Distribution of Farms and Value of Production by Gross Farm Sales, 2011 ................... 25 Table 2. U.S. Crop and Livestock Revenue by Source, 2008-2013F ............................................ 26 Table 3. U.S. Farm Production Expenses by Source, 2008-2013F ................................................ 27 Table 4. Annual U.S. Farm Income Since 2006 ............................................................................. 28 Table 5. Average Annual Income per U.S. Household, Farm versus All, 2006-2013F .................. 29 Table 6. Average Annual Farm Sector Debt-to-Asset Ratio, 2006-2013F ..................................... 29 Table 7. U.S. Prices and Support Rates for Selected Farm Commodities Since 2007/08 Marketing Year ........................................................................................................................... 30 Contacts Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 31 Congressional Research Service U.S. Farm Income Introduction The U.S. farm sector is vast and varied. It encompasses production activities related to traditional field crops (such as corn, soybeans, wheat, and cotton) and livestock and poultry products (including meat, dairy, and eggs), as well as fruits, tree nuts, and vegetables. In addition, U.S. agricultural output includes greenhouse and nursery products, forest products, custom work, machine hire, and other farm-related activities. The intensity and economic importance of each of these activities, as well as their underlying market structure and production processes, vary regionally based on the agro-climatic setting, market conditions, and other factors. As a result, farm income and rural economic conditions may vary substantially across the United States.1 However, this report focuses singularly on aggregate national net farm income and the farm debtto-asset status as reported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).2 Annual U.S. net farm income is the single most watched indicator of farm sector well-being, as it captures and reflects the entirety of economic activity across the range of production processes, input expenses, and marketing conditions that have persisted during a specific time period. When national net farm income is reported together with a measure of the national farm debt-to-asset situation, the two summary statistics provide a quick indicator of the economic well-being of the national farm economy. Measuring Farm Profitability Two different indicators measure farm profitability: net cash income and net farm income. Net cash income compares cash receipts to cash expenses. As such, it is a cash flow measure representing the funds that are available to farm operators to meet family living expenses and make debt payments. For example, crops that are produced and harvested but kept in on-farm storage are not counted in net cash income. Farm output must be marketed (i.e., exchanged for payment) be sold before it is counted as part of the household’s cash flow. Net farm income is a value of production measure, indicating the farm operator’s share of the net value added to the national economy within a calendar year, independent of whether it is received in cash or noncash form. In contrast to net cash incomeAs a result, net farm income includes the value of home consumption, changes in inventories, capital replacement, and implicit rent and expenses related to the farm operator’s dwelling that are not reflected in cash transactions during the current year. Thus, . Thus, once a crop is grown and harvested it is included in the farm’s net income calculation, even if it remains in on-farm storage. Net cash income is generally less variable than net farm income. Farmers can manage the timing of crop and livestock sales and of the purchase of inputs to stabilize the variability in their net cash income. For example, farmers can hold crops from large harvests to sell in the forthcoming year, when output may be lower and prices higher prices higher. • Off-farm income and crop insurance subsidies, both of which have increased in importance in recent years, are not included in the calculation of aggregate farm income. • Off-farm income is included in the discussion of farm income at the household level in the last section of this report. 1 For information on state-level farm income, see the “U.S. and State Farm Income Dataand Wealth Statistics,” available as part of the Farm Income Data Filesand Wealth Statistics, Farm Income and Costs Briefing Room, Farm Economy Topics, Economic Research Service (ERS), USDA, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/data/FarmIncome/finfidmu.htm-products/farm-income-and-wealth-statistics.aspx. 2 For a more detailed discussion of the issues in this report, see the Briefing Room “Farm Income and Costs: 20122013 Farm Sector Income Forecast,” ERS, USDA, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FarmIncome/nationalestimates.htmtopics/farm-economy/farm-sector-income-finances/ highlights-from-the-2013-farm-income-forecast.aspx. Congressional Research Service 1 . U.S. Farm Income Off-farm income and crop insurance subsidies and benefits, both of which have increased in importance in recent years, are not included in the calculation of aggregate farm income. Instead, they are included in the discussion of farm income at the household level. 2012 Farm Income Forecast 2nd Highest on Record U.S. net farm income is forecast at $91.7 billion in 2012, down $6.5 billion (6.5%) from the record total of $98.1 billion achieved in 2011 (Figure 1 and Table 4) but still the 2nd highest on record.3 When measured in cash terms, net cash income in 2012 is projected at $96.3 billion, down 11.5% from last year’s record $108.7 billion. When adjusted for inflation (Figure 2), current farm income forecasts remain well below the peak period of the early 1970s. The 2012 outlook for a second year of strong farm income occurs in spite of slow growth in the domestic economy, and is being driven, in large part, by the outlook for tight feed grain and oilseed stocks due to robust agricultural export growth and continued strong demand for corn as a feedstock in biofuels production. USDA forecasts that U.S. stocks of feed grains and soybeans will approach historic low levels relative to demand by the end of summer 2012 as U.S. feed grain demand has exceeded production in all but one year since 2004.4 This persistent trend is primarily the result of five factors: rapid growth of U.S. corn-based ethanol production (whose share of the U.S. corn crop in 2011 exceeded feed use for the first time); limited supply of available U.S. cropland to expand production; prolonged weakness of the U.S. dollar, which has made U.S. agricultural exports competitive in foreign markets despite high prices; strong income growth in China and other international markets, which has increased demand for livestock products and the feedstuffs (feed grains and protein meals) needed to produce them; and a substantial decline in the price responsiveness of both supply and demand in agricultural commodity markets. The convergence of these factors has resulted in falling grain and oilseed stocks, record or near-record prices for most feedstuffs—grains, oilseeds, hay, and pasture—in 2011 and early 2012, and increasingly volatile commodity prices. These factors are expected to persist at least into the summer months of 2012, thus maintaining strong demand for feed grains and strong upward pressure on prices for all commodities that compete for farm land. As a result, market prices have risen toward or above their 2008 highs (Figure 3 and Figure 5), thus improving the earnings outlook for most agricultural commodities, but especially for grain, cotton, and oilseed producers. Since the 2002-2003 period, major commodity prices (at the farm gate) have risen substantially. With respect to major field crops (Figure 4), wheat, soybean, and cotton prices have more than doubled, while corn and rice prices have nearly tripled in value. At its 2008 peak of nearly $20 per cwt, rice prices were four times their 2002-2003 period value of under $5 per cwt. With respect to livestock product prices (Figure 6), hog farm prices have nearly doubled, milk and cattle (500 pound and heavier) prices are up over 60%, and broiler prices are up over 50%. 3 ERS’s 2012 farm sector income forecast, last updated on February 13, 2012, is available at the Farm Income and Costs Briefing Room, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FarmIncome/nationalestimates.htm. 4 See CRS Report R41956, U.S. Livestock and Poultry Feed Use and Availability: Background and Emerging Issues . Congressional Research Service 2 . U.S. Farm Income Figure 1. Annual U.S. Farm Sector Nominal Income, 1960 to 2012F 125 $ Billion (Nominal) 100 75 Net Cash Income 50 Net Farm Income 25 0 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, “2012 Farm Income Forecast,” February 12, 2012, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FarmIncome/. Notes: All values are in nominal terms, i.e., not adjusted for inflation. 2010 is preliminary, 2011 is forecast. Figure 2. Annual U.S. Farm Sector Inflation-Adjusted Income, 1960 to 2012F $ Billion (Inflation-Adjusted) 150 125 Net Cash Income 100 75 50 25 1960 Net Farm Income 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, “2012 Farm Income Forecast,” February 12, 2012, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FarmIncome/. Notes: All values are adjusted for inflation using the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Consumer Price Index (CPI) where 2002-2003=100. 2011 is preliminary, 2012 is forecast. Congressional Research Service 3 . U.S. Farm Income Figure 3. Monthly Farm Prices for Major Field Crops, Nominal Dollars 20 100 Rice 16 80 Cotton 12 60 Soybeans 8 Wheat 4 40 $ per pound (cotton) $ per bu. (corn, wheat, soyb.) or $ per cwt (rice) ($ per unit: bushels, pounds, or hundredweight (cwt)) 20 Corn 0 2002 2004 2006 2008 0 2012 2010 Source: USDA, National Agricultural Statistics Service, January 30, 2012. Note: cwt = hundredweight or units of 100 lbs. Figure 4. Monthly Farm Prices for Major Field Crops, Indexed Dollars (indexed to 2002-2003 = 100) 400 Rice 350 Corn 300 250 2002-2003 = 100 Soybeans 200 150 Wheat Cotton 100 50 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: USDA, National Agricultural Statistics Service, January 30, 2012. Notes: Monthly prices are adjusted for inflation using the CPI to permit relative comparisons. Congressional Research Service 4 . U.S. Farm Income Figure 5. Monthly Farm Prices for Major Livestock Products, Nominal Dollars ($ per hundredweight (cwt)) 24 Cattle, 500+ lbs 100 18 All Milk 75 12 All Hogs 50 $ per cwt (milk) $ per cwt (cattle, hogs, broilers) 125 6 Broilers 25 2002 0 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: USDA, National Agricultural Statistics Service, January 30, 2012. Note: cwt = hundredweight or units of 100 lbs. Figure 6. Monthly Farm Prices for Livestock Products, Indexed Dollars (indexed to 2002-2003 = 100) 220 Hogs 190 Milk 2002-2003 = 100 160 130 Broilers Cattle, 500lb.+ 100 70 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: USDA, National Agricultural Statistics Service, January 30, 2012. Notes: Monthly prices are adjusted for inflation using the CPI to permit relative comparisons. Congressional Research Service 5 . U.S. Farm Income Market Overview U.S. Ethanol Policy Sets the Stage for Higher Commodity Prices Since 2005, crop output and sales have been influenced by the rapid expansion of U.S. corn-based biofuel production, due in large part to strong federal incentives.5 The U.S. corn-ethanol industry has grown rapidly from 2004, when 3.4 billion gallons of ethanol were produced using an estimated 12% of the U.S. corn crop, to 2011 when an estimated 13.9 billion gallons were produced using an estimated 40% of the U.S. corn crop.6 This additional demand has helped to push corn and other crop prices steadily higher since 2005 as they compete for a fixed amount of cropland (Figure 3 and Table 7). The U.S. ethanol sector received a substantial boost in December 2007, when the Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA) was signed into law (P.L. 110-140). EISA greatly expands the mandate for corn-based ethanol use from 10.5 billion gallons in 2009 to 15 billion gallons by 2015.7 In addition, strong export demand through 2007 and the first half of 2008, aided in part by a weak dollar, helped to draw down stocks for major grains and oilseeds to historically low levels, thus supporting higher market prices. Financial Crisis Stymies Growth in 2009 After reaching record net cash income and near-record net farm income in 2008, the U.S. farm economy slowed considerably in 2009 owing to the international financial crisis, falling global demand, and weak commodity prices for most major field crops and livestock products. The economic conditions that arose in late 2008—the global financial crisis, economic recession, rising unemployment, limited credit availability, and plummeting asset values—persisted into 2009 and contributed to a severe weakening of consumer demand through most of 2009. As a result, domestic and international demand for biofuels, as well as meat and dairy products (and subsequently feed grain), eroded dramatically. Economic Growth Restarts in 2010, Slows Again in 2011 After some initial growth in 2010, the U.S. economy slowed considerably again in 2011, with minimal job growth since 2008. As a result, U.S. consumers have been very cautious in their spending behavior. However, robust economic growth in major global markets in 2010 and early 2011 (including China, India, Brazil, and other parts of Asia and the Middle East) reinvigorated international consumer demand. When coupled with a weak U.S. dollar and events that occurred in international feed grain markets—drought in Russia, Kazakhstan, and the Ukraine in 2010, plus strong Chinese demand for corn and feedstuffs—U.S. agricultural export values surged in 2010 and are projected to reach an all-time high of $136.3 billion in 2011 (Figure 13).8 USDA’s estimates for 2010/2011 marketing-year ending stocks for U.S. corn and soybean fell to near historic low levels relative to expected demand (8.6% and 6.6%), while current-year 5 See CRS Report R41282, Agriculture-Based Biofuels: Overview and Emerging Issues. Ethanol production estimates by CRS based on DOE, Energy Information Agency (EIA) monthly data reports, at http://www.eia.gov/totalenergy/data/monthly/; corn use estimates are from World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE), World Agricultural Outlook Board (WAOB), USDA, February 9, 2012. 7 See CRS Report R40155, Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS): Overview and Issues. 8 USDA News Release, No. 0046.12, February 10, 2012. 6 Congressional Research Service 6 . U.S. Farm Income (2011/2012) ending stocks for U.S. corn are projected at 6.3%, the lowest level since 1995. These tight stock projections have been a driving factor in higher grain and oilseed prices as markets attempt to ration the projected limited supply across a range of demand sources.9 U.S. livestock prices for most major species—cattle, hogs, and dairy—also strengthened in 2011, driven in part by a booming export market, tightening domestic supplies, and some modest recovery in U.S. retail demand. Various Factors Will Influence 2012 Market Conditions Global total grain output is projected up in 2011/2012; however, total demand is expected to exceed total production leading to a second year of decline in total global grain stocks.10 The world corn and soybean supply situation for 2012 will hinge on the drought-impacted final harvests of Argentina and Brazil (two of the world’s largest producers of both crops), and the acreage and yield outcomes this spring for U.S. crops. The low U.S. corn and soybean endingstock outlook, coupled with the uncertainty surrounding grain supplies in international markets, will likely drive continued grain and oilseed market price sensitivity to any news regarding possible changes in the supply and demand outlook through both the spring planting season of 2012 and into the summer growing season. If favorable weather persists and good harvests are assured for the fall, it is expected that crop prices will decline from current levels. Supplies of beef will be limited in 2012 due to tightened supplies of cattle. On January 1, 2012, the U.S. cattle inventory was the lowest since 1952. Rising feed prices since 2009 have tightened feedlot margins. In addition, a severe drought in 2011 in the Southwest that extended into the Central Plains and the Southeast limited grazing opportunities and hay production for ranchers in the affected region. As a result, substantial herd liquidation accelerated in the latter half of 2011. Beef prices in 2012 will be supported by the tight supplies of cattle (Table 7). Similarly, high feed costs tightened broiler margins and the ensuing reduced egg sets are expected to lower broiler supply and raise prices in 2012. In contrast, milk and hog prices weakened towards the end of 2011 and are forecast lower in 2012 as milk supplies catch up to demand, and hog supplies are bolstered by continued productivity gains (pigs per litter) that have occurred in the past several years. The eventual 2012 U.S. agricultural economic well-being will hinge greatly on spring crop planting and summer growing weather, as well as both domestic and international macroeconomic factors including economic growth and consumer demand. Cash Receipts Total farm sector cash receipts for 2012 are projected at $395 billion, just off of the 2011 record of $396.1 billion (Table 4 and Figure 7). Farm sector revenue sources and shares include crop revenues (50% of sector revenues), livestock receipts (42%), government payments (about 3%), and other farm-related income including machine hire and custom work (5%). 9 See CRS Report R41956, U.S. Livestock and Poultry Feed Use and Availability: Background and Emerging Issues . International Grains Council, Grain Market Report, GMR No. 417, November 24, 2011. 10 Congressional Research Service 7 . U.S. Farm Income Figure 7. Farm Cash Receipts by Source, 1990 to 2012F 400 Government Payments Farm-Related Income $ Billion 300 200 Livestock Product Receipts 100 Crop Receipts 0 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, “2012 Farm Income Forecast,” February 12, 2012, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FarmIncome/. Notes: 2012 is forecast. Receipts from crop and livestock product sales, and government payments, are described in more detail below. Farm-related income includes income from custom work, machine hire, agritourism, forest product sales, insurance indemnities, and cooperative patronage dividend fees. Figure 8. Crop Cash Receipts by Source, 2006 to 2012F 200 Cotton Other Fruit & Vegs $ Billion 150 Food crops 100 Oil crops 50 Feed crops 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011F 2012F Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, “2012 Farm Income Forecast,” February 12, 2012, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FarmIncome/. Notes: 2011 is preliminary, 2012 is forecast. See Table 2 for details. Congressional Research Service 8 . U.S. Farm Income Crops Total crop sales are projected at a record $198.3 billion in 2012 (up 0.7% from last year’s record. This includes field crops sales (i.e., feed, food, oil crops, and cotton) of a record $132.9 billion (up nearly 3%) and other crop receipts—i.e., fruits and nuts, vegetables, and all other crops—of $65.4 billion (down 3.3%). The field crop sales include record feed crop (i.e., corn, sorghum, barley, and oats) sales of $73 billion (up 33%), food crop—i.e., wheat and rice—sales of $14.8 billion (down 13%), record oil crop—i.e., soybeans, sunflowers, rapeseed/canola, and other minor oilseeds—sales of $37.1 billion (up over 2%), and cotton sales of $7.9 billion (slightly below 2011’s record of $8 billion). Other crop receipts are projected at $65.4 billion (down 3% from the previous year’s record). As a result, the crop sector is projected to account for over 50% of total U.S. gross cash receipts in 2012 (Figure 7). With respect to the individual crops, receipts for corn and soybeans are projected record-large at $63.6 billion (up nearly 8%) and $34.5 billion (up almost 2%) in 2012, while wheat market sales are projected down 16% at $12 billion. High cotton prices offset by lower production are expected to push cotton receipts down by 1% from 2011’s mark of $8 billion in sales. Livestock In terms of the value of production, the livestock, dairy, and poultry sector is projected down slightly in 2012, as record-high cash receipts for livestock (cattle, hogs, and sheep) of $87.6 billion (up over 2%, Figure 9) are muted somewhat by lower dairy receipts of $37.1 billion (down 6.5%), while poultry and egg receipts are essentially unchanged. The early outlook for 2012 projects cattle and broiler prices up due to herd liquidation and tightening supplies, while milk and hog prices are both projected 8% lower as supplies recover (Table 7). Figure 9. U.S. Livestock Product Cash Receipts by Source, 2006 to 2012F 200 Other 150 Dairy Poultry & Eggs $ Billion 100 Hogs 50 Cattle & calves 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011F 2012f Source: See above source and notes. Congressional Research Service 9 . U.S. Farm Income Government Payments Government farm payments, although projected up 4% in 2012 at $11 billion, are expected to remain relatively small (second lowest total since 1997) as high commodity prices shut off payments under the price-contingent marketing loan and counter-cyclical payment programs (Figure 10). Government payments are expected to represent a relatively small share (2.8%) of projected gross cash income of $395 billion. In contrast, government payments represent 12% of net farm income of $91.7 billion; however, the importance of government payments as a percent of net farm income varies nationally by sector and region. Figure 10. U.S. Government Farm Support, Direct Outlays, 1996 to 2012F 25 All Other Ad Hoc and Emergency Conservation 20 Price Contingent Direct Payments $ Billion 15 10 5 0 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012f Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, “2011 Farm Income Forecast,” February 12, 2012, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FarmIncome/. Notes: Data are on a fiscal year basis and may not correspond exactly with the crop or calendar year; 2011 is preliminary, 2012 is forecast. Direct payments include production flexibility contract payments enacted under the 1996 farm bill and fixed direct payments of the 2002 and 2008 farm bills; price-contingent outlays include loan deficiency payments, marketing loan gains, counter-cyclical payments and ACRE payments; conservation outlays include Conservation Reserve Program payments along with other conservation program outlays; Ad Hoc and Emergency includes emergency supplemental crop and livestock disaster payments and market loss assistance payments for relief of low commodity prices; and “all other” outlays include peanut quota buyout payments, milk income loss payments, tobacco transition payments, and other miscellaneous expenditures. Payments under the three price-contingent programs (marketing loan benefits, CCP, and ACRE) are expected to fall to $0 in 2012 (down from $25 million in 2011) on the strength of high commodity prices. Payments under the Average Crop Revenue (ACRE) program are forecast at $10 million in 2012, same as in 2011 and down from $422 million in 2010. Nearly all of this decline is due to higher cotton and rice prices, as other program crop prices were above program payment triggers for all of 2011 and are expected to remain so throughout 2012 (Table 7).11 11 For more information on commodity programs, see CRS Report RL34594, Farm Commodity Programs (continued...) Congressional Research Service 10 . U.S. Farm Income Ad hoc and emergency disaster assistance has figured heavily in farm sector income in most of the years since 1989.12 Supplemental and ad hoc disaster assistance payments are forecast to be $1.5 billion in 2012, a 4.7% decrease from 2011 levels. The 2008 farm bill (P.L. 110-246) created a permanent fund for disaster assistance, the Agricultural Disaster Relief Trust Fund. Supplemental Revenue Assistance (SURE) payments from this fund and from the 2009 Recovery Act are expected to amount to $910 billion in 2012.13 All other disaster programs—including primarily the Emergency Conservation Program, Livestock Forage Program, Livestock Indemnity Program, and Noninsured Assistance Program— are functioning at existing statutory authority and appropriation levels. Once a county is declared eligible for disaster relief, producer participation in these programs depends on the extent to which their crop or livestock losses meet a particular program’s threshold. Conservation programs include all conservation programs operated by USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA) and the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) that provide direct payments to producers. Conservation payments grew slowly but steadily from 1998 through 2008 before dipping slightly to $2.8 billion in 2009. Estimated conservation payments of $3.7 billion in 2012 reflect programs being brought up toward funding levels authorized by current legislation. Farm fixed direct payments, whose payment rates are fixed in legislation and are not affected by the level of program crop prices, are forecast at $5.0 billion, up 5% from 2011 due to an increase in the portion of base acres receiving payments (raised to 85% from 83.3%) for the 2012 crop year. Production Expenses Total farm production expenses are forecast to rise by about 4% to a record $333.8 billion in 2012, ahead of 2011’s previous record tally of $287 billion (Table 3). The $12.5 billion increase in expenses contrasts with the anticipated $1.1 billion decline in gross cash receipts, thus contributing to a slightly lower farm income outlook in 2012. Fertilizer, fuel, feed, electricity, and seed costs, as well as most operating and overhead expenses, are all projected at record levels in 2012 (Figure 11 and Figure 12). The increase in expenses will affect crop and livestock farms differently. The principal expenses for livestock farms (i.e., feed and feeder animals and poultry) are expected to increase nearly $1.9 billion (2.3%) to $82.4 billion, while the principal crop expenses (seed, fertilizer, pesticides, and crop insurance expenses) are expected to increase $3.9 billion (4.3%) to $56.6 billion. The miscellaneous operating expenses category, which is projected up $3.4 billion or 10.4%, includes crop insurance costs and thus directly impacts crop production. (...continued) in the 2008 Farm Bill. 12 CRS Report RS21212, Agricultural Disaster Assistance. 13 CRS Report R40452, A Whole-Farm Crop Disaster Program: Supplemental Revenue Assistance Payments (SURE). Congressional Research Service 11 . U.S. Farm Income Figure 11. Farm Cash Production Expenses by Source, 2006 to 2012F 350 Overhead 300 Other operating costs 250 200 $ Billion Hired Labor Interest 150 Manufactured inputs 100 Farm origin inputs 50 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011F 2012f Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, “2011 Farm Income Forecast,” February 12, 2012, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FarmIncome/. Notes: 2011 is preliminary, 2012 is forecast. See for Table 3 details. Figure 12. U.S. Farm Gross Revenue, Production Expenses, and Net Income 400 Gross Revenue $ Billion 300 200 Production Expenses 100 Net Cash Income 0 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: See above source. Notes: All values are in nominal terms, i.e., not adjusted for inflation. 2011 is preliminary, 2012 is forecast. Congressional Research Service 12 . U.S. Farm Income Agricultural Trade Outlook A major catalyst behind projections for stronger farm income is the outlook for strong U.S. agricultural exports in 2011 (forecast up 26% to $136.3 billion; Figure 13). USDA projects that U.S. agricultural exports will decline slightly to $132 billion in 2012. Much of the increase since 2010 has been due to higher-priced grain and feed shipments plus record oilseed exports to China, and growing animal product exports to East Asia.14 Figure 13. U.S. Agricultural Trade Since 1940 $140 Exports $120 $ Billions $100 $80 $60 Import s $40 $20 Trade Surplus $0 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, ERS, Outlook for U.S. Agricultural Trade, AES-72, November 30, 2011. Over the past four decades, steady growth in high-valued export products (Figure 14) has helped to push U.S. agricultural export value to ever higher totals; however, the current outlook is driven primarily by growth in bulk commodity shipments (primarily wheat, rice, feed grains, soybeans, cotton, and unmanufactured tobacco), which are forecast up 42% in 2011. Horticultural exports are forecast up over $3 billion to $25.9 billion in 2011, and another $2.1 billion higher in 2012, on strong demand from Canada, the EU, and Asian markets. Livestock, poultry, and dairy exports are expected to grow strongly through 2011 (up nearly 27% to $27.3 billion), while cotton exports are forecast up significantly at $8.8 billion in 2011, as larger domestic supplies and less export competition have pushed cotton prices to 140-year highs. The top five forecast markets for U.S. agricultural exports in 2011 are expected to be China ($19.9 billion), Canada ($18.6 billion), and Mexico ($17.7 billion), followed by Japan ($13.9 billion) and the EU-27 ($10.2 billion). In 2012, Canada is expected to switch places with China as the U.S.’s top export market while the other three markets retain their same ranking. 14 USDA, ERS, Outlook for U.S. Agricultural Trade, AES-72, November 30, 2011. The U.S. agricultural trade outlook—released quarterly—is available at the ERS Agricultural Trade Briefing Room at http://www.ers.usda.gov/ Briefing/AgTrade/; the next update is scheduled for February 23, 2012. Congressional Research Service 13 . U.S. Farm Income Figure 14. U.S. Agricultural Trade: Bulk vs. High-Value Shares 100% 80% 60% High-Value 40% 20% Bulk 0% 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Source: USDA, ERS, Outlook for U.S. Agricultural Trade, AES-72, November 30, 2011. U.S. agricultural imports are projected to be record large at $94.5 billion in 2011; however, the trade surplus also is projected record large at $42.9 billion, due to the surge in exports. U.S. agricultural imports are projected to grow rapidly in 2012 to $105.5 billion, thus cutting into the trade surplus which falls to $26.5 billion. However, as a share of total gross farm receipts, U.S. agricultural exports is projected to account for a record 33% of earnings (Figure 15). Figure 15. U.S. Agricultural Export Value as Share of Total Gross Farm Income 40% U.S. Agricultural Exports as Share of Total Gross Farm Income Share as % 30% 20% 10% 0% 1935 1945 1955 1965 1975 1985 1995 2005 Source: USDA, ERS, Outlook for U.S. Agricultural Trade, AES-72, November 30, 2011. Congressional Research Service 14 . U.S. Farm Income Long-Run Farm Income Projections to 2021 Several institutions (both public and private)—including USDA, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute (FAPRI), and IHS Global Insight—routinely produce long-run 10- to 15-year agricultural projections for the U.S. farm sector. These annual projections cover agricultural commodities, agricultural trade, and aggregate indicators of the sector, such as farm income and food prices. The most recent projections available at the time of this report’s preparation are made by USDA and cover the period 2012-2021.15 Appending the long-term projections for the 2012-2021 period to the current USDA agricultural outlook for 2012 produces the chart seen in Figure 16. Figure 16. USDA Long-Run Farm Income Projections, 2012-2021 450 Gross Revenue 375 $ Billion 300 225 Production Expenses 150 75 Net Cash Income 0 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 Source: Data for 1960-2012 are from USDA, ERS, Briefing Room: Farm Income and Costs; data for 2013 to 2021 are from USDA, ERS, Briefing Room: Agricultural Baseline Projections, February 13, 2012. Based on October 2011 macroeconomic conditions, USDA projected net cash income levels to dip slightly to around $85 billion in 2015 before growing again to a projected $97 billion by 2021.16 15 USDA Agricultural Projections to 2021, OCE-2012-1, USDA, ERS, Briefing Room: Agricultural Baseline Projections, February 13, 2012; at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/Baseline. 16 USDA updates its long-run forecasts every February. The projections are highly conditional on critical long-term assumptions made for U.S. and international macroeconomic conditions, U.S. and foreign agricultural and trade policies, and growth rates of agricultural productivity in the United States and abroad. Congressional Research Service 15 . U.S. Farm Income Farm Asset Values and Debt Farm asset values—which reflect farm investors’ and lenders’ expectations about long-term profitability of farm sector investments—are projected up nearly 6% in 2012 to $2,474 billion, reflecting a continued strong outlook in the general farm economy (Table 6). Higher farm asset values are due primarily to stronger farm real estate values (Figure 17). After rebounding in 2010 from a 2.8% decline during 2009—the first decline since 1987—farm land cash markets suggest that land values grew by a projected 6.8% in 2011 due to strong crop prices. This same pattern is reflected in both cropland and pastureland values. Farm land cash markets in early 2012 suggest that land values will continue to see gains related to strong crop prices in 2012. Figure 17. U.S. Average Farm Land Values, 1985 to 2011F $3,500 Cropland $3,000 $ per Acre $2,500 $2,000 $1,500 Farm Real Estate $1,000 $500 Pasture $0 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Source: USDA, NASS, Land Values 2011 Summary, August 2011. Notes: 2011 is a forecast. Farm real estate value measures the value of all land and buildings on farms. Cropland and pasture values are only available since 1998. Meanwhile, total farm debt is forecast to rise by nearly 4% to $254.1 billion in 2012. As a result of the relative improvement between farm asset values and farm debt, farm equity (or net worth, defined as asset value minus debt) is projected higher in 2012 at $2,220 billion. The farm debt-to-asset ratio had been steadily declining since 1998’s value of 16%, to a recent low of 10.4% in 2007, before rising to 12% in 2008 and 2009 (Figure 18). However, it has resumed its pattern of decline, falling in 2010 and 2011, and is forecast to decline further in 2012 to about 10.3% (lowest figure on record). These data suggest a strong financial position in 2012 for the agriculture sector as a whole. The U.S. farm debt-to-asset ratio peaked in 1985 at 23%. Congressional Research Service 16 . U.S. Farm Income Figure 18. U.S. Farm Debt-to-Asset Ratio Since 1960 25% 20% 15% 10% Farm Debt-to-Asset Ratio 5% 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, “2012 Farm Income Forecast,” February 12, 2012, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FarmIncome/. Note: 2011 is preliminary, 2012 is forecast. Average Farm Household Income After two years of declines in 2008 and 2009, average farm household income returned to growth in 2010, up nearly 8%, and is projected to grow for a second consecutive year in 2011, rising 2% to $86,352.17 The share of farm income derived from off-farm sources has increased steadily in recent decades and appears to have peaked at about 95% in 2000. In 2011, off-farm income sources are forecast to account for about 87% of the national average farm household income, compared with about 13% from farming activities (Figure 19 and Table 5). Over the past decade, farm household incomes have surged ahead of average U.S. household incomes (Figure 20 and Figure 21). In 2009 (the last year for which comparable data were available), the average farm household income of $77,169 was about 14% higher than the average U.S. household income of $67,976 (Table 5). 17 Household farm income data was last updated on November 29, 2011. Congressional Research Service 17 . U.S. Farm Income Figure 19. U.S. Average Farm Household Income, On- and Off-Farm Sources, Since 1960 $90,000 $75,000 $60,000 $45,000 $30,000 Off-Farm $15,000 On-Farm $0 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, Briefing Room: Farm Household Economics and Well-Being: Historic Data On Farm Operator Household Income, February 12, 2012, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/ WellBeing/Gallery/historic.htm. Figure 20. Comparison of Farm to U.S. Average Household Income Since 1960 $90,000 Average Farm Household Income $75,000 $60,000 $45,000 Average US Household Income $30,000 $15,000 $0 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, “2011 Farm Income Forecast,” November 29, 2011, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FarmIncome/. Note: 2010 is preliminary, 2011 is forecast. Congressional Research Service 18 . U.S. Farm Income Figure 21. Ratio of Farm to U.S. Average Household Income Since 1960 200% Ratio of Farm to U.S. Average Household Income 150% 100% 50% 0% 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: See above source note. 2009 is the last year with comparable data. The share of income from farming increases with farm size as measured by gross sales (Table 1). “Large” commercial farm households (farms with annual sales greater than $250,000) obtained nearly 73% of household income on-farm and accounted for 82% of the value of total U.S. agricultural production in 2010, while representing only about 10% of farm households.18 Intermediate family farms (farms with annual sales in excess of $10,000 but less than $250,000) obtained about 7% of household income from on-farm sources, accounted for about 17% of the value of total U.S. agricultural production, and represented about 30% of family farms. “Small” farm households (annual sales less than $10,000) actually lost revenue from farming operations (-8% of household income) and accounted for less than 2% of the value of total U.S. agricultural production in 2010, while representing over 60% of farm households. A substantial number of these small farms are classified as rural residence farms and either receive little or no income from farm sources or have a total income level that qualifies them as limited-resource farms. Table 1. Distribution of Farms and Value of Production by Farm Size, 2010 Family Farms Value of Gross Sales Total U.S. Production On-farm Share Off-farm Share Total Value 1.4% -8% 108% $70,558 29.9% 16.9% 7% 93% $78,716 214,070 10.0% 81.7% 73% 27% $185,098 2,143,063 100.0% 100.0% 14% 86% $84,440 Share Share 1,287,976 60.1% $10,000 to $249,999 641,017 > $250,000 < $10,000 All Total HH Income Number Source: USDA, ERS, 2010 USDA Agricultural Resource Management. 18 For more information on farm typology, see the ERS Briefing Room, Farm Household Economics and Well-Being: Farm Operator Household Income Forecasts, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/WellBeing/farmhouseincome.htm. Congressional Research Service 19 . U.S. Farm Income Table 2. U.S. Crop and Livestock Revenue ($ Billions) by Source, 2007-2012F 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011a 2012a Change (%) Field crops 86.9 111.1 105.0 107.7 129.3 132.9 2.7% Food grains 13.6 18.7 14.8 13.9 16.7 14.8 -12.7% Wheat 11.4 15.4 11.7 10.9 13.9 12.0 -15.8% Rice 2.1 3.2 3.0 3.0 2.7 2.8 0.5% Feed crops 42.3 58.6 50.6 52.5 68.3 73.0 6.5% Corn 34.1 48.4 42.5 44.8 58.8 63.6 7.6% Other Grains 2.2 2.7 2.4 2.2 2.2 2.4 10.2% Hay 6.0 7.4 5.6 5.4 7.4 7.0 -5.5% Oil Crops 24.6 28.6 35.5 35.1 36.3 37.1 2.3% Soybeans 23.1 26.4 33.7 33.2 33.9 34.5 1.6% Peanuts 0.8 1.2 0.8 0.8 1.0 1.3 23.8% Cotton (lint & seed) 6.5 5.2 4.0 6.3 8.0 7.9 -1.2% Other Crops 61.8 63.9 63.4 65.2 67.6 65.4 -3.3% Fruits and nuts 18.7 19.2 19.2 21.5 22.2 21.0 -6.0% Vegetables 19.3 19.9 20.3 19.9 20.9 19.8 -5.8% All other crops 23.9 24.8 23.9 23.7 24.4 24.6 1.0% Total Crops 150.1 175.0 168.3 172.9 196.9 198.3 0.7% Meat animals 65.1 65.0 59.0 69.9 85.5 87.6 2.3% Cattle & calves 49.8 48.5 43.8 51.5 62.9 64.9 3.1% Hogs 14.8 16.1 14.7 17.9 22.0 22.0 0.3% Sheep & lambs 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.7 0.6 -3.9% Poultry and eggs 33.1 36.8 32.4 35.5 36.2 36.3 0.3% Broilers 21.5 23.2 21.8 23.7 22.7 23.4 3.1% Turkeys 3.9 4.5 3.6 4.4 5.0 5.1 0.7% Eggs 6.7 8.2 6.1 6.5 7.6 7.0 -9.7% All dairy 35.5 34.8 24.3 31.4 39.5 37.1 6.5% Other livestock 4.9 5.0 4.5 4.7 4.8 4.8 0.2% Total Livestock 138.5 141.6 120.3 141.4 166.0 165.8 -0.1% Government payments 11.9 12.2 12.2 12.4 10.6 11.0 3.9% Other farm incomeb 17.6 21.5 22.0 18.3 22.6 19.9 -13.7% Total Farm Revenue 318.0 350.4 322.8 345.0 396.1 395.0 -0.3% Item Source: “Farm Income Briefing Room,” Economic Research Service, USDA, February 13, 2012. a. Forecast.. Change represents year-to-year change between 2011 and 2012. b. Machine hire, custom work, forest products sales, insurance indemnities, and other farm income. Congressional Research Service 20 . U.S. Farm Income Table 3. U.S. Farm Production Expenses ($ Billions) by Source, 2007-2012F 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011a 2012a Change (%) Farm origin inputsb 73.4 79.8 77.3 81.3 98.1 100.1 2.0% Feed 41.9 46.9 45.0 45.4 57.0 59.0 3.5% Livestock 18.8 17.7 16.7 19.6 23.5 23.4 -0.2% 12.6 15.1 15.5 16.3 17.6 17.8 0.7% 46.3 55.0 49.0 49.5 59.9 60.8 1.5% Fertilizer & lime 17.7 22.5 20.1 21.0 27.6 27.6 -0.1% Fuels & oils 13.8 16.2 12.7 13.2 16.9 17.2 1.3% Electricity 4.3 4.5 4.6 4.6 4.6 4.8 5.4% Pesticides 10.5 11.7 11.5 10.6 10.8 11.3 4.5% Total interest charges 15.1 15.4 15.2 14.5 14.2 14.9 4.9% Short-term interest 6.9 6.7 6.4 6.0 6.2 6.2 1.0% Real-estate interest 8.3 8.8 8.7 8.5 8.1 8.7 7.9% Other operating exp.d 89.8 94.0 89.5 86.2 92.7 99.7 7.6% Repair & maintenance 14.3 14.8 14.7 14.8 17.2 18.2 5.3% Hired & contract labor 29.0 30.0 28.9 27.6 27.2 28.6 5.3% Custom work 3.8 4.1 3.9 4.3 4.8 4.9 1.1% Marketing, storage, etc. 10.3 10.1 10.3 10.3 10.9 12.2 11.3% Miscellaneous 32.3 34.9 31.7 29.2 32.5 35.9 10.4% Overhead expensese 44.9 49.0 50.3 54.2 56.3 58.2 3.3% Capital consumption 27.0 28.7 30.1 30.7 31.6 32.5 2.8% Property taxes 10.3 10.7 10.4 10.8 11.1 12.1 8.7% Non-operator net rent 7.6 9.6 9.8 12.6 13.6 13.6 -0.1% 269.5 293.2 281.1 285.6 321.3 333.8 3.9% Item Seed Manufactured inputsc Total Production Exp. Source: “Farm Income Briefing Room,” Economic Research Service, USDA, February 13, 2012. a. Forecast.. Change represents year-to-year change between 2011 and 2012. b. Farm origin inputs include purchases of feed, livestock and poultry, and seed. c. Manufactured inputs include fertilizers and lime, pesticides, petroleum fuel and oils, and electricity. d. Other operating costs include repair and maintenance of capital items, machine hire and custom work, marketing storage, transportation expenses, and other miscellaneous expenses. e. Overhead expenses include property taxes, net rent to a non-operator landlord, and capital consumption. Congressional Research Service 21 . Table 4. Annual U.S. Farm Income Since 2005 ($ billions) Item 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011a 2012a Change (%) 1. Cash receipts 241.0 240.6 288.5 316.7 288.6 314.4 362.9 364.1 0.3% Cropsb Livestock 2. Government paymentsc 116.1 124.9 122.1 118.5 150.1 138.5 175.0 141.6 24.4 15.8 11.9 12.2 168.3 120.3 12.2 172.9 141.4 12.4 196.9 166.0 10.6 198.3 165.8 11.0 0.7% -0.1% 4.0% Fixed direct CCPe Marketing Loan Benefitsf Conservation Ad hoc and emergency All otherg 3. Farm-related incomeh 5.2 4.1 7.1 2.8 3.2 2.1 14.4 5.1 4.0 1.8 3.0 0.3 1.7 16.8 5.1 1.1 1.1 3.1 0.5 1.0 17.6 5.1 0.7 0.3 3.2 2.1 0.8 21.5 4.7 1.2 1.1 2.8 0.6 1.7 22.0 4.8 0.2 0.1 3.5 3.1 0.7 18.3 4.7 0.0 0.0 3.6 1.6 0.7 22.6 5.0 0.0 0.0 3.7 1.5 0.8 19.9 5.3% 0% 0% 3.5% -5.3% 22.5% -12.0% 4. Gross cash income (1+2+3) 5. Cash expensesi 6. NET CASH INCOME 279.8 192.8 87.0 273.2 204.8 68.4 318.0 240.6 77.4 350.4 261.8 88.6 322.8 248.4 74.4 345.0 252.7 92.3 396.1 287.4 108.7 395.0 298.7 96.3 -0.3% 4.0% -11.5% 7. Total gross revenuesj 8. Total production expensesk 9. NET FARM INCOME 298.6 219.8 78.8 290.2 232.7 57.4 339.6 269.5 70.0 377.9 293.2 84.7 342.7 281.1 61.6 364.7 285.6 79.1 419.4 321.3 98.1 425.5 333.8 91.7 1.5% 3.9% -6.5% paymentsd Source: USDA, Economic Research Service, briefing rooms: Farm Income and Costs: Farm Sector Income, and Costs: Farm Sector Income, available at http://www.ers.usda.gov/ Briefing/FarmIncome/; U.S. farm income data updated as of February 13, 2012. a. Data for 2011 are USDA forecasts. Change represents year-to-year change between 2011 and 2012. b. Includes Commodity Credit Corporation loans under the farm commodity support program. c. Government payments reflect payments made directly to all recipients in the farm sector, including landlords. The non-operator landlords’ share is offset by its inclusion in rental expenses paid to these landlords and thus is not reflected in net farm income or net cash income. For more information on U.S. farm commodity programs, see CRS Report RL34594, Farm Commodity Programs in the 2008 Farm Bill, by Jim Monke; for more information on conservation programs see CRS Report RL34557, Conservation Provisions of the 2008 Farm Bill, by Tadlock Cowan, Renée Johnson, and Megan Stubbs. d. Direct payments include production flexibility payments of the 1996 Farm Act through 2001, and fixed direct payments under the 2002 Farm Act since 2002. e. CCP = counter-cyclical payments. f. Includes loan deficiency payments (LDP); marketing loan gains (MLG); and commodity certificate exchange gains. g. Peanut quota buyout, milk income loss payments, and other miscellaneous program payments. h. Income from custom work, machine hire, agri-tourism, forest product sales, and other farm sources. i. Excludes depreciation and perquisites to hired labor. j. Gross cash income plus inventory adjustments, the value of home consumption, and the imputed rental value of operator dwellings. k. Cash expenses plus depreciation and perquisites to hired labor. CRS-22 . Table 5. Average Annual Income per U.S. Household, Farm versus All, 2004-2011F ($ per household) 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 On-Farm Income $13,325 $14,227 $8,541 $11,364 $9,764 Off-Farm income $67,279 $67,091 $72,502 $77,432 Total Farm income $80,604 $81,318 $81,043 $88,796 2009 2010 2011F $6,866 $11,796 $11,174 $70,032 $70,302 $72,671 $75,178 $79,796 $77,169 $84,440 $86,352 Average U.S. Farm Income by Source Average U.S. Household Income Farm Household Income as Share of U.S. Avg. Household Income (%) $60,466 $63,344 $66,570 $67,609 $68,424 $67,976 na na 133% 128% 122% 131% 117% 114% na na Source: USDA, ERS Briefing Room: Farm Household Economics and Well-Being: Historic Data On Farm Operator Household Income, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/ WellBeing/Gallery/historic.htm; as of February 13, 2012. Note: Data for 2011 are USDA forecasts. Table 6. Average Annual Farm Sector Debt-to-Asset Ratio, 2005-2012F ($ billions) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011F 2012F Farm Assets 1,779.4 1,923.6 2,055.3 2,023.3 2,054.4 2,190.9 2,339.8 2,474.3 Farm Debt 196.4 203.6 214.1 241.6 241.9 246.9 244.8 254.1 Farm Equity 1,583.0 1,720.0 1,841.2 1,781.7 1,812.5 1,944.0 2,095.0 2,220.2 Debt-to-Asset Ratio (%) 11.0% 10.6% 10.4% 11.9% 11.8% 11.3% 10.5% 10.3% Source: USDA, ERS Briefing Room: Farm Household Economics and Well-Being: Farm Business Balance Sheet,, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/data/FarmBalanceSheet/ fbsdmu.htm; as of February 13, 2012. Note: Data for 2011 are preliminary, 2012 are USDA forecasts. CRS-23 . Table 7. U.S. Prices and Support Rates for Selected Farm Commodities Since 2006 Commoditya Unit Year 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12Fb Wheat $/bu Jun-May 4.26 6.48 6.78 4.87 5.70 7.15-7.45 28.1% — — 2.75 3.92 Corn $/bu Sep-Aug 3.04 4.20 4.06 3.55 5.18 5.80-6.60 19.7% — 1.95 2.63 Sorghum $/bu Sep-Aug 3.29 4.08 3.20 3.22 5.02 5.70-6.50 21.5% — 1.95 2.57 Barley $/bu Jun-May 2.85 4.02 5.37 4.66 3.86 5.20-5.60 39.9% — 1.85 2.44 Oats $/bu Jun-May 1.87 2.63 3.15 2.02 2.52 3.25-3.55 34.9% 1.33 1.44 Rice $/cwt Aug-Jul 9.96 12.80 16.80 14.40 12.70 13.90-14.50 11.8% 6.50 10.50 Soybeans $/bu Sep-Aug 6.43 10.10 9.97 9.59 11.30 11.10-12.30 3.5% 5.00 5.80 Soybean oil ¢/lb Oct-Sep 31.0 52.0 32.16 35.95 53.20 50.5-54.5 -1.3% — — Soybean meal $/st Oct-Sep 205.4 335.9 331.2 311.27 345.52 290-320 -11.7% — — — — — — — Cotton, Upland ¢/lb Aug-Jul 46.5 59.3 47.8 62.9 81.50 87-93 10.4% — — — — — — — — — — 52.00 71.25 Choice Steers $/cwt Jan-Dec 85.4 91.8 92.27 83.25 95.38 114.73 20.3% 121-129 9.0% — — Barrows/Gilts $/cwt Jan-Dec 47.3 47.1 47.84 41.24 55.06 66.11 20.1% 63-67 -1.7% — — Broilers ¢/lb Jan-Dec 64.4 76.4 79.7 77.60 82.90 79.0 -4.7% 82-87 7.0% — — Eggs ¢/doz Jan-Dec 71.8 114.4 128.3 103.0 106.30 115.3 8.5% 103-109 -8.1% — — Milk $/cwt Jan-Dec 12.90 19.13 18.29 12.83 16.26 20.14 23.9% 18.00-18.70 -8.9% — — 2012/13Pb % change 2011 from 2011/12d Loan ratee 2011 Target Price % change from 2010/11c Source: Various USDA agency sources as described in the notes below. a. Season average farm price for grains and oilseeds are from USDA, National Agricultural Statistical Service, Agricultural Prices. Calendar year data is for the first year, e.g., 2000/2001 = 2000; F = forecast and P = projection from World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) February 9, 2012;—= no value; and USDA’s out-year 2012/2013 crop price forecasts will first appear in the May 2012 WASDE report. WASDE reports are available at http://www.usda.gov/oce/commodity/ wasde/. Soybean and livestock product prices are from USDA, Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS): soybean oil—Decatur, IL, cash price, simple average crude; soybean meal—Decatur, IL, cash price, simple average 48% protein; choice steers—Nebraska, direct 1100-1300 lbs.; barrows/gilts—national base, live equivalent 51%52% lean; broilers—wholesale, 12-city average; eggs—Grade A, New York, volume buyers; and milk—simple average of prices received by farmers for all milk. b. Data for 2011/2012 are USDA forecasts; 2012/2013 data are USDA projections. c. Percent change from 2010/2011, calculated using the difference from the midpoint of the range for 2011/2012 with the estimate for 2010/2011. d. Percent change from 2011/2012, calculated using the difference from the midpoint of the range for 2012/2013 with the estimate for 2011/2012. e. Loan rate and target prices are for the 2011/2012 crop year. For more information, see CRS Report RL34594, Farm Commodity Programs in the 2008 Farm Bill. CRS-24 . U.S. Farm Income Author Contact Information Randy Schnepf Specialist in Agricultural Policy rschnepf@crs.loc.gov, 7-4277 Congressional Research Service 25U.S. Farm Income Highlights of 2013 Farm Income Forecast Net farm income and total farm wealth are forecast record high in 2013, while the debt-to-equity ratio is expected to decline to the lowest level since 1960. These data suggest a strong financial position heading into 2013 for the agricultural sector as a whole relative to the rest of the U.S. economy, but with substantial regional variation. • U.S. net farm income is forecast at a record $128 billion in 2013, about $15 billion (14%) above 2012 and $10 billion above 2011’s previous record (Figure 1 and Table 4).3 When adjusted for inflation (Figure 2), 2013’s net farm income forecast is expected to be the highest since 1974, but to remain well below the peak period of 1973. • When measured in cash terms, net cash income in 2013 is projected lower at $123.5 billion, down 9% from 2012’s record level but still third-highest on record. The decline in cash income compared to farm income is expected to result from substantial increases in 2013 end-of-year inventories as farmers postpone marketing into 2014. • Increases in farm asset values ($2,732 billion), driven by record land values, are expected to exceed increases in farm debt ($277 billion), resulting in a fifth successive record high for farm equity ($2,455 billion) and a debt-to-equity ratio of 10.2%, lowest since 1960. • A return to trend yields coupled with important increases in crop planting—driven primarily by high farm prices due to drought-reduced supplies in 2012 (Figure 4)—are expected to result in large production increases that offset price declines in 2013. • Farm prices for most feedstuffs—feed grains (corn, sorghum, barley, and oats), hay, and protein meals—as well as soybeans are forecast at record highs in the 2012/2013 crop year before declining in mid-2013. High commodity prices, in turn, are expected to contribute to relatively low government payments in 2012 and 2013 ($10.8 billion and $10.9 billion, respectively)—up slightly from 2011, but otherwise the lowest since 1997. • The full effects of the drought-related increase in commodity prices for packaged and processed foods (cereal, corn flour, etc.) will likely take 10-12 months to move through to retail food prices, and are projected to contribute to 3% to 4% food price inflation in 2013. • Market returns for the 2012/2013 crop year are expected to be bolstered by large crop insurance indemnity payments related to 2012 crop losses—already estimated in excess of $14.6 billion as of February 18, 2013.4 The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that 2012 indemnities may reach $16 billion.5 • Total production expenses are also projected record large ($353 billion) in 2013, led by feed costs ($67.7 billion), labor expenses ($30.5 billion), and net rent to non-operator landlords ($15.4 billion). 3 USDA, ERS, Farm Sector Income & Finances, updated February 11, 2013. USDA, Risk Management Agency (RMA), FCIC Summary of Business, February 18, 2013. 5 CBO, February 2013 Baseline for farm Programs, February 5, 2013. 4 Congressional Research Service 2 U.S. Farm Income Figure 1. Annual U.S. Farm Sector Nominal Income, 1960 to 2013F 150 $ Billion (Nominal) 125 100 75 Net Cash Income 50 Net Farm Income 25 0 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, ERS, “2013 Farm Income Forecast,” February 11, 2013. Notes: All values are in nominal terms, that is, not adjusted for inflation. 2012 is preliminary, 2013 is forecast. Figure 2. Annual U.S. Farm Sector Inflation-Adjusted Income, 1960 to 2013F $ Billion (Inflation-Adjusted) 150 125 Net Cash Income 100 75 50 25 1960 Net Farm Income 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, ERS, “2013 Farm Income Forecast,” February 11, 2013. Notes: All values are adjusted for inflation using the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Consumer Price Index (CPI) where 2002-2003=100. 2012 is preliminary, 2013 is forecast. Congressional Research Service 3 U.S. Farm Income Figure 3. U.S. Farm Gross Revenue, Production Expenses, and Net Income 450 Gross Revenue 375 300 225 150 Production Expenses 75 Net Cash Income 0 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, ERS, “2013 Farm Income Forecast,” February 11, 2013. Notes: All values are in nominal terms, that is, not adjusted for inflation. 2012 is preliminary, 2013 is forecast. Recap of U.S. Agriculture in 2012 The 2012/2013 growing season will be remembered for the dramatic reversal of fortunes whereby early springtime prospects for record harvests and low commodity prices were transformed in a two-month period into an outlook of supply shortages and record high commodity prices. Springtime planting conditions in 2012 were nearly ideal across much of the United States and farmers responded by planting early and extensively—from fence row to fence row in response to high commodity prices. On June 12, USDA projected U.S. corn plantings of 95.9 million acres— the most since 1937. Normal weather patterns were expected to produce a record 2012 corn harvest of 14.8 billion bushels which, in turn, would lead to a build-up in U.S. corn ending stocks in 2013 of nearly 2 billion bushels (up 111% year-to-year), and a 2012/2013 season-average corn price of $4.60/bushel (down 25%).6 However, in mid-June, an extensive swath of the Central and Southern Plains and much of the Corn Belt were hit by a combination of extreme heat and dryness that produced what was referred to as a “flash drought” (Figure 4). By August—just two months later—USDA had completely reversed its outlook from one of abundance to one of shortage. USDA lowered its outlook for U.S. corn production to 10.8 billion bushels (a 27% drop of 4 billion bushels from its May forecast), corn price projections were raised sharply to $8.20 per bushel (up 78%), and stocks of feed grains and soybeans were forecast to approach historic low levels relative to demand by the end of 2012/2013 crop year (i.e., at the end of summer 2013).7 6 Midpoint of a projected range of $4.20 to $5.00 per bushel, World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE), World Agricultural Outlook Board (WAOB), USDA, June 12, 2012. 7 WASDE, WAOB, USDA, August 10, 2012. Congressional Research Service 4 U.S. Farm Income Figure 4. Widespread Drought Damaged 2012 Crop Output Source: USDA at http://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/. The outlook for lower feed grain and oilseed stocks pushed feed grain and oilseed prices well above their 2008 highs (Figure 8 and Figure 9).8 In addition to expected crop production shortfalls, the summer heat also took a severe toll on the U.S. livestock sector, as the lack of adequate rainfall over more than half of the country resulted in reduced availability of pasture and higher prices for corn and other feedstuffs. Drought-induced higher feed prices and heat stress on crops, pastures, livestock, and poultry restrained growth of U.S. cattle and hog breeding herd numbers as well as poultry and milk production.9 Despite relatively high output prices for meat and dairy products (Figure 12 and Figure 13), the U.S. livestock, poultry, and dairy sectors have come under severe economic pressure, squeezed by high prices for their major cost component— feed grains and protein meals (derived primarily from crushing oilseeds). Early Outlook for U.S. Agriculture for 2013 A reversal of the 2012 drought-impacted crop situation will hinge greatly on a return to normal weather patterns over the major U.S. growing regions in 2013. Drought-related concerns persist across the western Corn Belt and Plains states (Figure 5). Market-watchers including U.S. corn growers, livestock feeders, ethanol producers, and policymakers are well aware of the uncertain yield prospects heading into the 2013 growing season. The two largest U.S. commercial crops— corn and soybeans—both have ending-season stocks for the 2012/2013 year projected at or near historic low levels relative to annual usage, 5.6% and 4.1%, respectively (Figure 6 and Figure 7). 8 For more information, see the ERS (USDA) publications Feed Outlook, FDS-12h, August 14, 2012, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/media/868958/fds12h.pdf, and Oil Crops Outlook, OCS-12h, August 2012, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/ocs-oil-crops-outlook/ocs12h.aspx. 9 See “U.S. Drought 2012: Farm and Food Impacts,” ERS, USDA, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/newsroom/us-drought2012-farm-and-food-impacts.aspx. Congressional Research Service 5 U.S. Farm Income Figure 5. Drought Persists in Early 2013 for Plains States and Western Corn Belt Source: USDA at http://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/. University of Illinois economist Darrel Good has documented that: [a] consideration for some in forming early yield expectations is the state of soil moisture going into the planting season. However, as learned again last year, the yield implications of those conditions are dwarfed by the impact of growing season weather. While drought conditions are of concern, those conditions alone do not provide much information about 2013 yield prospects.10 Spring planting will not begin until late March or early April across the southern regions of the major corn and soybean production zones. The central Corn Belt usually begins planting in earnest in late April and into May. The main growing season stretches from June through August. In a pre-season projection of the 2013 agricultural outlook, USDA projects corn and soybean plantings at 96 million and 76 million acres, down only slightly from 2012’s 96.9 million and 77.5 million acres.11 USDA uses trend yield estimates of 163.5 and 44.4 bushels per acre (compared to 2012 drought-reduced yields of 122.3 and 39.3 bushels per acre) for 2013 for both corn and soybeans. The trend yields combine with the acreage projections to produce the outlook for record production of corn at 14.4 billion bushels and a near-record soybean crop of 3.3 billion bushels. If realized, this would likely result in substantially lower crop prices in general and lower feed costs in particular. 10 Darrel Good, “Early Focus on the Prospective Size of the 2013 U.S. Corn Crop,” farmdocDAILY, Dept. of Agricultural and Consumer Economics, Univ. of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, January 22, 2013; at http://www.farmdocdaily.illinois.edu/. 11 USDA Agricultural Projections to 2021, OCE-2012-1, USDA, ERS, Briefing Room: Agricultural Baseline Projections, February 13, 2012, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/Baseline. Congressional Research Service 6 U.S. Farm Income Figure 6. U.S. Corn Stocks Tighten in 2012/2013 While Prices Rise 70% Stocks-to-Use Ratio $/bushel $8.00 $7.00 60% $6.00 50% $5.00 40% $4.00 30% $3.00 20% $2.00 7% 10% 5.6% 5% $1.00 $0.00 0% 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Source: Data for 1970-2012 is from World Agricultural Outlook Board (WAOB), USDA, World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE), February 8, 2013; data for 2013 are from USDA, Office of the Chief Economist (OCE), USDA Agricultural Projections to 2022, OCE-2013-1, February 11, 2013. Figure 7. U.S. Soybean Stocks Approach Historic Lows Relative to Use in 2012/2013 35% Stocks-to-Use Ratio $/bushel $16.00 $14.00 30% $12.00 25% $10.00 20% $8.00 15% $6.00 10% $4.00 5.4% 4.6% 4.4% 5% 4.1% $2.00 0% $0.00 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Source: Data for 1970-2012 is from WAOB, USDA, WASDE, February 8, 2013; data for 2013 are from USDA, OCE, USDA Agricultural Projections to 2022, OCE-2013-1, February 11, 2013. Congressional Research Service 7 U.S. Farm Income Figure 8. Monthly Farm Prices for Corn, Soybeans, and Wheat, Nominal Dollars $8 $ per bu. (corn) $ per bu. (soybeans, wheat) $16 Soybeans $6 $12 Corn $4 $8 Wheat $2 $4 $0 2002 $0 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: USDA, National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), Agricultural Prices, January 31, 2013. Note: cwt = hundredweight or units of 100 lbs. Figure 9. Monthly Farm Prices for Corn, Soybeans, and Wheat, Indexed Dollars 350 Corn 300 250 2002-2003 = 100 200 Wheat Soybeans 150 100 50 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: USDA, NASS, Agricultural Prices, January 31, 2013. Notes: Monthly prices are adjusted for inflation using the CPI (2002-2003 = 100) to permit relative comparisons. Congressional Research Service 8 U.S. Farm Income Figure 10. Monthly Farm Prices for Cotton and Rice, Nominal Dollars 20 100 Rice 80 Cotton 12 60 8 40 4 20 0 2002 0 2004 2006 2008 2010 $ per pound (cotton) $ per cwt (rice) 16 2012 Source: USDA, NASS, Agricultural Prices, January 31, 2013. Notes: cwt = hundredweight or units of 100 lbs. Figure 11. Monthly Farm Prices for Cotton and Rice, Indexed Dollars 400 350 Rice 300 250 2002-2003 = 100 200 Cotton 150 100 50 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: USDA, NASS, Agricultural Prices, January 31, 2013. Notes: Monthly prices are adjusted for inflation using the CPI (2002-2003 = 100) to permit relative comparisons. Congressional Research Service 9 U.S. Farm Income Figure 12. Monthly Farm Prices for Cattle and Milk, Nominal Dollars 140 24 20 100 16 Cattle, 500+ lbs 80 12 60 2002 8 2004 2006 2008 2010 $ per cwt (milk) $ per cwt (cattle) All Milk 120 2012 Source: USDA, NASS, Agricultural Prices, January 31, 2013. Note: cwt = hundredweight or units of 100 lbs. Figure 13. Monthly Farm Prices for Cattle and Milk, Indexed Dollars 180 Milk 160 2002-2003 = 100 140 120 Cattle, 500lb.+ 100 80 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: USDA, NASS, Agricultural Prices, January 31, 2013. Notes: Monthly prices are adjusted for inflation using the CPI (2002-2003 = 100) to permit relative comparisons. Congressional Research Service 10 U.S. Farm Income Figure 14. Monthly Farm Prices for Hogs and Broilers, Nominal Dollars 75 All Hogs $ per cwt 65 55 45 Broilers 35 25 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: USDA, NASS, Agricultural Prices, January 31, 2013. Note: cwt = hundredweight or units of 100 lbs. Figure 15. Monthly Farm Prices for Hogs and Broilers, Indexed Dollars 220 All Hogs 190 2002-2003 = 100 160 130 Broilers 100 70 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: USDA, NASS, Agricultural Prices, January 31, 2013. Notes: Monthly prices are adjusted for inflation using the CPI (2002-2003 = 100) to permit relative comparisons. Congressional Research Service 11 U.S. Farm Income Cash Receipt Highlights • Total farm sector gross cash receipts for 2013 are projected at a record $440 billion, 1.5% above last year’s record (Table 2 and Figure 16). • Farm sector revenue sources and shares include crop revenues (51% of sector revenues), livestock receipts (40%), government payments (about 3%), and other farm-related income including crop insurance indemnities, machine hire, and custom work (7%). Figure 16. Farm Cash Receipts by Source, 1990 to 2013F 450 Government Payments Farm-Related Income 375 300 225 150 Livestock Product Receipts 75 Crop Receipts 0 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Source: USDA, ERS, “2013 Farm Income Forecast,” February 11, 2013. Notes: 2013 is forecast. Receipts from crop and livestock product sales, and government payments, are described in more detail below. Farm-related income includes income from custom work, machine hire, agritourism, forest product sales, insurance indemnities, and cooperative patronage dividend fees. Crop Highlights Total crop sales—projected at a near-record $216.3 billion in 2012 (down 1.5% from last year’s record)—are expected to account for 51% of total U.S. gross cash receipts in 2013 (Figure 16). The crop sector includes field crop sales (i.e., feed and food grains, oil crops, and cotton) of $146 billion (up 1.6%) and other crop receipts—that is, fruits and nuts, vegetables, and all other crops—of $70.4 billion (down slightly by 1.1%). Highlights include projections for: • record corn crop value of $68.5 billion, up 4.7% from last year’s record; • a record feed grain crop—corn, sorghum, barley, and oats—value of over $80.3 billion (up 5.7%); • a soybean crop valued at $38.1 billion, down 10.6% from last year’s record; Congressional Research Service 12 U.S. Farm Income • a total oil crop—soybeans, sunflowers, rapeseed, canola, and other minor oilseeds—valued at $40.8 billion (down 10.3%); • a record hay crop value of over $9 billion (up 16.5%); • a near-record food crop—wheat and rice—value of $18.9 billion (down a slight 0.8% from 2012’s record); • a cotton crop valued at $6 billion (down over 24% from last year due to lower production); and • other crop receipts—fruits and nuts, vegetables, and all other crops—down slightly by 1.1% from the previous year’s record, to $70.4 billion. Figure 17. Crop Cash Receipts by Source, 2007 to 2013F 250 Other 200 Cotton Fruit & Vegs 150 Food crops Oil crops 100 Feed crops 50 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012F 2013F Source: USDA, ERS, “2013 Farm Income Forecast,” February 11, 2013. Notes: 2012 is preliminary, 2013 is forecast. See Table 2 for details. Livestock Highlights The livestock sector, broadly defined, includes cattle, hogs, sheep, poultry and eggs, dairy, and other minor activities. The value of the total livestock sector is projected record-large in 2013 at $176.6 billion (up 2.8%). However, relatively high livestock product prices are expected to be offset at least in part by continuing high feed costs in the early part of 2013. Record-high cash receipts are projected for cattle, poultry and eggs, while dairy cash receipts are projected near record large. Highlights for individual activities include projections for: • record cattle and calf sales of over $67.4 billion (up by a slight 0.6%); • record broiler sales of $27.7 billion (up 6.8%); Congressional Research Service 13 U.S. Farm Income • record hog sales of $22.3 billion (up 3.6% from last year’s record); and • near-record dairy sales, valued at $38.5 billion, the second-largest on record. Figure 18. U.S. Livestock Product Cash Receipts by Source, 2007 to 2013F 180 Other 150 Dairy 120 Poultry & Eggs 90 Hogs 60 Cattle & calves 30 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012F 2013F Source: USDA, ERS, “2013 Farm Income Forecast,” February 11, 2013. Notes: 2012 is preliminary, 2013 is forecast. See Table 2 for details. Government Payment Highlights Government farm payments are projected nearly unchanged in 2013 at $10.9 billion (up 0.1%). This would be the third-lowest outlay since 1997 as high commodity prices shut off payments under the price-contingent marketing loan and counter-cyclical payment programs (Figure 19). 12 • Government payments are expected to represent a relatively small share (2.5%) of projected gross cash income of $440.3 billion. • In contrast, government payments represent 10% of net farm income of $128.2 billion; however, the importance of government payments as a percent of net farm income varies nationally by sector and region. • Farm fixed direct payments, whose payment rates are fixed in legislation and are not affected by the level of program crop prices, are forecast at $4.9 billion in 2013, nearly unchanged from 2012 (down a slight 0.4%). • Payments under the price-contingent marketing loan benefit and counter-cyclical payment (CCP) programs are expected to remain at $0 in 2013, as program crop prices are expected to remain above program payment triggers for all of 2013 (Table 7).12 See CRS Report RL34594, Farm Commodity Programs in the 2008 Farm Bill. Congressional Research Service 14 U.S. Farm Income Figure 19. U.S. Government Farm Support, Direct Outlays, 1997 to 2013F 25 All Other Ad Hoc and Emergency Conservation 20 Price Contingent Direct Payments $ Billion 15 10 5 0 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013F Source: USDA, ERS, “2013 Farm Income Forecast,” February 11, 2013. Notes: Data are on a fiscal year basis and may not correspond exactly with the crop or calendar year; 2012 is preliminary, 2013 is forecast. Direct payments include production flexibility contract payments enacted under the 1996 farm bill and fixed direct payments of the 2002 and 2008 farm bills; price-contingent outlays include loan deficiency payments, marketing loan gains, counter-cyclical payments and ACRE payments; conservation outlays include Conservation Reserve Program payments along with other conservation program outlays; Ad Hoc and Emergency includes emergency supplemental crop and livestock disaster payments and market loss assistance payments for relief of low commodity prices; and “all other” outlays include peanut quota buyout payments, milk income loss payments, tobacco transition payments, and other miscellaneous expenditures. • Payments under the Average Crop Revenue (ACRE) program are forecast at $15 million in 2013. • Milk Income Loss Contract payments—which compensate dairy producers when domestic milk prices fall below a specified benchmark price subject to feed-cost adjustments—are forecast down 37% in 2013 at $290 million. • Conservation programs include all conservation programs operated by USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA) and the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) that provide direct payments to producers. Estimated conservation payments of $3.7 billion in 2013 are largely unchanged from 2012. • Supplemental and ad hoc disaster assistance payments are forecast to be $1.26 billion in 2013, a 22% increase from 2012 levels.13 • Supplemental Revenue Assistance (SURE) payments are expected to amount to $870 billion in 2013 (up 54%) to cover crop-year 2011 losses.14 13 CRS Report RS21212, Agricultural Disaster Assistance. SURE payments are based on the average market-year price calculated after a crop year ends. The lag in calculating the average price coupled with a market-year spilling over two calendar years, results in the nearly two-year delay in (continued...) 14 Congressional Research Service 15 U.S. Farm Income • Noninsured Assistance Program payments of $250 million are expected to be made to livestock and specialty crop producers for whom no commodity insurance program is available. • Note that disaster relief programs (SURE, LIP, LFP, ELAP, and TAP) under the extended 2008 farm bill only covered losses incurred prior to October 1, 2011.15 Thus, drought-related commodity and livestock losses for the 2012 crop year currently are not covered. Production Expense Highlights • Nearly every cost category—fertilizer, pesticides, fuel, feed, seed, etc., as well as most operating and overhead expenses—is projected at or near-record levels in 2013 (Figure 20 and Figure 3). • Total farm production expenses are forecast to rise to a record $353 billion in 2013, up 5.7% from 2012’s previous record (Table 3). • The year-over-year increase in expenses of $19.2 billion easily offsets the $6.7 billion rise in gross cash receipts, accounting for an 8.9% decline in net cash income. Figure 20. Farm Cash Production Expenses by Source, 2007 to 2013F 400 Overhead 300 Other operating costs 200 Hired Labor Interest Manufactured inputs 100 Farm origin inputs 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012F 2013F Source: USDA, ERS, “2013 Farm Income Forecast,” February 11, 2013. Notes: 2012 is preliminary, 2013 is forecast. See for Table 3 details. (...continued) SURE payments. See CRS Report R40452, A Whole-Farm Crop Disaster Program: Supplemental Revenue Assistance Payments (SURE). 15 The 2008 farm bill was extended through FY2013 by the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (P.L. 112-240). Congressional Research Service 16 U.S. Farm Income • The increase in expenses will affect crop and livestock farms differently. The principal expenses for livestock farms (i.e., feed and feeder animals and poultry) are expected to increase by nearly $4 billion (+5%) to $90.2 billion, while the principal crop expenses (seed, fertilizer, pesticides, and crop insurance premiums) are expected to increase by $6.4 billion (+6.8%) to $100.3 billion. • The miscellaneous operating expenses category, which is projected up nearly $6 billion (+16.6%) to $40.3 billion, includes crop insurance premiums and thus directly impacts crop production. Agricultural Trade Outlook A major catalyst behind projections for stronger farm income is the strength of U.S. agricultural exports—forecast at a near record $135.8 billion in 2012 (Figure 21), and a record $142 billion in 2013, up 5% from 2012. Figure 21. U.S. Agricultural Trade Since 1970 $180 $150 Exports $120 Imports $90 $60 $30 Trade Surplus $0 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 Source: Data for 2013 are from USDA, Office of the Chief Economist (OCE), USDA Agricultural Projections to 2022, OCE-2013-1, February 11, 2013; and Outlook for U.S. Agricultural Trade, AES-77, February 21, 2013, ERS, USDA. • USDA projects that annual U.S. agricultural exports will decline slightly in 2014 and 2015 before growing to near $180 billion by 2022. • U.S. agricultural imports were record-large in 2012 at $103.4 billion and are projected up another 9% to $112.5 billion in 2013. • As a result of the surge in imports, the U.S. agricultural trade surplus is projected at $32.4 billion in 2012 (down 24% from a peak in 2011) and at $29.5 billion in 2013 (down another 9%). From 2016 through 2022 the trade surplus is projected to stabilize at around $17 billion. Congressional Research Service 17 U.S. Farm Income • Over the past four decades, steady growth in high-valued export products (Figure 22) has helped to push U.S. agricultural export value to ever higher totals. However, this pattern appears to have plateaued since 2006, when rapid growth in demand from both international commodity markets and domestic biofuels pushed prices for most bulk crops (especially feed grains and oilseeds) to record levels. • Much of the increase in U.S. agricultural exports since 2010 has been due to higher-priced grain and feed shipments plus record oilseed exports to China, and growing animal product exports to East Asia.16 • Bulk commodity shipments (primarily wheat, rice, feed grains, soybeans, cotton, and unmanufactured tobacco) are forecast at a 36% share of total U.S. agricultural exports in 2012, at $49.5 billion, before falling slightly to $49 billion (35% share) in 2013. • In contrast, high-valued export products—including horticultural, livestock, poultry, and dairy—are forecast to rise for a fourth consecutive year, to $93 billion in 2013. • The top six forecast markets for U.S. agricultural exports in 2012 are China ($23.4 billion), Canada ($20 billion), and Mexico ($18.9 billion), followed by Japan ($13.8 billion), the EU-27 ($8.9 billion), and South Korea ($6.2 billion). Figure 22. U.S. Agricultural Trade: Bulk vs. High-Value Shares 100% 80% 60% High-Value 40% 20% Bulk 0% 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Source: Data for 2013 are from USDA, OCE, USDA Agricultural Projections to 2022, OCE-2013-1, February 11, 2013; and Outlook for U.S. Agricultural Trade, AES-77, February 21, 2013, ERS, USDA. 16 USDA, ERS, Outlook for U.S. Agricultural Trade, AES-76, November 29, 2012. The U.S. agricultural trade outlook—released quarterly—is available at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/AgTrade/. Congressional Research Service 18 U.S. Farm Income • In 2013, the top six U.S. export markets are expected to retain their same rank, although China’s total is forecast to decline slightly to $22 billion, just ahead of Canada’s $21 billion. • As a share of total gross farm receipts, U.S. agricultural exports are projected to account for 32% of earnings in 2013 (Figure 23). In the out-year projection period, 2013-2022, U.S. agricultural exports are expected to play an increasingly important role in terms of their share of gross cash farm income—approaching a 40% share by 2022. Figure 23. U.S. Agricultural Export Value as Share of Gross Cash Income 40% U.S. Agricultural Exports as Share of Total Gross Cash Income 30% 20% 10% 0% 1935 1945 1955 1965 1975 1985 1995 2005 2015 Source: Data for 2013 are from USDA, OCE, USDA Agricultural Projections to 2022, OCE-2013-1, February 11, 2013; and Outlook for U.S. Agricultural Trade, AES-77, February 21, 2013, ERS, USDA. Long-Run Farm Income Projections to 2022 USDA annually produces long-run 10-year agricultural projections for the U.S. farm sector. These annual projections cover agricultural commodities, agricultural trade, and aggregate indicators of the sector, such as farm income and food prices. USDA’s most recent projections were released on February 11, 2013, and cover the period 2013-2022.17 Appending the long-term projections for the 2013-2022 period to the current USDA agricultural outlook for farm income produces the chart seen in Figure 24. • Based on October 2012 macroeconomic conditions, U.S. net farm income is projected to reach a record $128 billion in 2013, reflecting the rise in prices for 17 USDA Agricultural Projections to 2021, OCE-2012-1, USDA, ERS, Briefing Room: Agricultural Baseline Projections, February 13, 2012; at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/Baseline. Congressional Research Service 19 U.S. Farm Income many agricultural commodities (due in part to the 2012 U.S. drought), as well as large crop insurance indemnities paid to the sector. • Net farm income is then projected to decline from the 2013 record through 2015, at which point it is projected to stabilize in the $92-$94 billion range through 2022.18 However, the projected net farm income out-year range remains well above the average of the previous nine-year period (2004-2012) of $83.7 billion. Key factors supporting U.S. net farm income projections are the following. • Cash receipts are projected to rise after 2015, driven largely by strengthening global food demand, a weaker dollar, and continuing biofuel demand. • However, lower government payments and rising farm production expenses after 2015 offset most of the gains in cash receipts and other sources of farm income resulting in the flat out-year range. Figure 24. USDA Long-Run Farm Income Projections, 2013-2022 150 $ Billion (Nominal) 125 100 75 50 25 0 1990 2000 2010 2020 Source: Data for 1990-2012 are from USDA, ERS, “2013 Farm Income Forecast,” February 11, 2013; data for 2014 to 2021 are from USDA, OCE, USDA Agricultural Projections to 2022, OCE-2013-1, February 11, 2013. Farm Asset Values and Debt The U.S. farm income and asset-value situation and outlook suggest a strong financial position heading into 2013 for the agriculture sector as a whole. 18 USDA updates its long-run forecasts every February. The projections are highly conditional on critical long-term assumptions made for U.S. and international macroeconomic conditions, U.S. and foreign agricultural and trade policies, and growth rates of agricultural productivity in the United States and abroad. Congressional Research Service 20 U.S. Farm Income • Farm asset values—which reflect farm investors’ and lenders’ expectations about long-term profitability of farm sector investments—are projected up nearly 8% in 2013 to $2,732 billion, reflecting a continued strong outlook in the general farm economy (Table 6). • Higher farm asset values are due primarily to stronger farm real estate values (Figure 25). After rebounding from a 2.8% decline during 2009—the first decline since 1987—farm real estate values have grown by a projected 26% through 2012, due largely to strong crop prices. • This same pattern is reflected in both cropland and pastureland values (up 33% and 7.5%, respectively, since 2008). Land value growth is expected to continue into 2013. • Meanwhile, total farm debt is forecast to rise to $277.4 billion in 2013 (up 3.2% year-to-year). • As a result of the relative improvement between farm asset values and farm debt, farm equity (or net worth, defined as asset value minus debt) is projected recordhigh in 2013, at $2,455 billion. • The farm debt-to-asset ratio had been steadily declining since 1985’s peak value of 23%—except for a one-year reversal in 2008, to a projected historic low of 10.2% in 2013 (Figure 26). Figure 25. U.S. Average Farm Land Values, 1985 to 2012F $4,000 Cropland $ per Acre $3,000 $2,000 $1,000 Farm Real Estate Pasture $0 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Source: USDA, NASS, Land Values 2012 Summary, August 2012. Notes: 2012 is a forecast. Farm real estate value measures the value of all land and buildings on farms. Cropland and pasture values are only available since 1998. Congressional Research Service 21 U.S. Farm Income Figure 26. U.S. Farm Debt-to-Asset Ratio Since 1960 25% 20% 15% 10% Farm Debt-to-Asset Ratio 5% 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, ERS, “2013 Farm Income Forecast,” February 11, 2013. Note: 2012 is preliminary, 2013 is forecast. Average Farm Household Income On-Farm vs. Off-Farm Income Shares • Average farm household income (the sum of both on- and off-farm income) is projected to decline slightly in 2013 after three consecutive years of growth, falling a slight 0.6% to $88,576 (Table 5). • The share of farm income derived from off-farm sources has increased steadily in recent decades and appears to have peaked at about 95% in 2002. • In 2013, off-farm income sources are forecasted to account for about 88% of the national average farm household income, compared with about 12% from farming activities (Figure 27). U.S. vs. Farm Household Income • Over the past decade, farm household incomes have surged ahead of average U.S. household incomes (Figure 28 and Figure 29). • In 2011 (the last year for which comparable data were available), the average farm household income of $87,278 was about 25% higher than the average U.S. household income of $69,677 (Table 5). Congressional Research Service 22 U.S. Farm Income Figure 27. U.S. Average Farm Household Income, On- and Off-Farm Sources, Since 1960 $90,000 $75,000 $60,000 $45,000 $30,000 Off-Farm $15,000 On-Farm $0 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, ERS, “Farm Household Economics and Well-Being: Historic Data On Farm Operator Household Income,” February 11, 2013. Figure 28. Comparison of Farm to U.S. Average Household Income Since 1960 $90,000 Average Farm Household Income $75,000 $60,000 $45,000 $30,000 Average US Household Income $15,000 $0 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: USDA, ERS, “2013 Farm Income Forecast,” February 11, 2013. Note: 2012 is preliminary, 2013 is forecast. Congressional Research Service 23 U.S. Farm Income Figure 29. Ratio of Farm to U.S. Average Household Income Since 1960 150% 125% 100% 75% Ratio of Farm to U.S. Average Household Income 50% 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Source: See above source note. 2011 is the last year with comparable data. Farm Household Income by Sales Class The share of income from farming increases with farm size as measured by gross sales (Table 1). • “Large” commercial farm households (farms with annual sales greater than $250,000) obtained nearly 75% of household income on-farm and accounted for 82% of the value of total U.S. agricultural production in 2011, while representing only about 10% of farm households.19 • Intermediate family farms (farms with annual sales in excess of $10,000 but less than $250,000) obtained about 10% of household income from on-farm sources, accounted for about 17% of the value of total U.S. agricultural production, and represented about 30% of family farms. • “Small” farm households (annual sales less than $10,000) actually lost revenue from farming operations (-9% of household income) and accounted for slightly more than 1% of the value of total U.S. agricultural production in 2011, while representing 59% of farm households. A substantial number of these small farms are classified as rural residence farms and either receive little or no income from farm sources or have a total income level that qualifies them as limited-resource farms. 19 For more information on farm typology, see the ERS Briefing Room, Farm Household Well-Being, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/topics/farm-economy/farm-household-well-being.aspx. Congressional Research Service 24 U.S. Farm Income Table 1. Distribution of Farms and Value of Production by Gross Farm Sales, 2011 Family Farms Value of Gross Sales Total U.S. Production On-farm Share Off-farm Share 1.2% -9% 109% $70,507 30% 16.5% 10% 90% $79,780 219,422 10% 82.3% 75% 25% $205,215 2,114,668 100% 100.0% 17% 83% $87,289 Share Share 1,255,816 59% $10,000 to $249,999 639,430 > $250,000 < $10,000 All Total HH Income (Mean) Number Total Value Source: USDA, ERS, Farm Income and Wealth Statistics; U.S. and State Farm Income and Wealth Statistics, updated as of November 27, 2012; available at http://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/farm-income-and-wealthstatistics.aspx. Congressional Research Service 25 U.S. Farm Income Table 2. U.S. Crop and Livestock Revenue by Source, 2008-2013F ($ billions) 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012a 2013a Change (%) Field crops 110.9 104.8 113.0 138.3 148.4 146.0 -1.6% Food grains 18.7 14.8 14.1 17.6 19.4 18.9 -0.8% Wheat 15.4 11.7 11.1 14.6 16.3 16.0 -1.7% Rice 3.2 3.0 3.0 2.9 2.7 2.8 4.4% Feed crops 58.4 50.5 54.8 72.7 76.0 80.3 5.7% Corn 48.4 42.5 47.2 63.9 65.4 68.5 4.7% Other Grains 2.7 2.4 2.3 2.1 2.7 2.7 -0.8% Hay 7.4 5.6 5.3 6.7 7.9 9.2 16.5% Oil Crops 28.6 35.6 36.5 39.7 45.4 40.8 -10.3% Soybeans 26.4 33.7 34.5 37.6 42.6 38.1 -10.6% Peanuts 1.2 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.6 1.4 -15.6% Cotton (lint & seed) 5.2 4.0 7.6 8.3 7.9 6.0 -24.4% Other Crops 63.8 64.0 66.6 69.9 71.2 70.4 -1.1% Fruits and nuts 19.0 19.3 21.9 24.2 25.4 23.6 -7.2% Vegetables 19.9 20.4 20.1 21.0 20.0 20.8 4.4% All other crops 24.9 24.3 24.6 24.8 25.8 26.0 0.5% Total Crops 174.7 168.9 179.6 208.3 219.6 216.3 -1.5% Meat animals 65.0 59.0 70.0 84.6 88.6 89.8 1.3% Cattle & calves 48.5 43.8 51.5 62.9 67.0 67.4 0.6% Hogs 16.1 14.7 18.0 21.7 21.5 22.3 3.6% Sheep & lambs 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.0 Poultry and eggs 36.8 32.5 35.5 36.4 40.1 41.8 4.2% Broilers 23.2 21.8 23.7 23.2 26.0 27.7 6.8% Turkeys 4.5 3.6 4.4 5.0 5.5 5.4 -1.9% Eggs 8.2 6.1 6.5 7.3 7.6 7.5 -0.6% All dairy 34.8 24.3 31.4 39.5 37.0 38.5 4.2% Other livestock 5.0 4.5 4.7 5.4 6.0 6.5 7.4% Total Livestock 141.6 120.3 141.6 166.0 171.7 176.5 2.8% Government payments 12.2 12.2 12.4 10.4 10.8 10.9 0.1% Other farm incomeb 21.5 22.0 18.3 26.1 31.3 36.4 16.1% Total Farm Revenue 350.1 323.3 351.8 410.8 433.4 440.1 1.5% Item Source: “USDA, ERS, Farm Income and Wealth Statistics; updated as of February 11, 2013. na=not available. a. Forecast. Change represents year-to-year change between 2012 and 2013. b. Machine hire, custom work, forest products sales, insurance indemnities, and other farm income. Congressional Research Service 26 U.S. Farm Income Table 3. U.S. Farm Production Expenses by Source, 2008-2013F ($ billions) 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012a 2013a Change (%) Farm origin inputsb 79.8 77.3 81.4 94.2 105.7 110.5 4.6% Feed 46.9 45.0 45.4 54.6 63.7 67.7 6.3% Livestock 17.7 16.7 19.6 21.7 22.1 22.4 1.2% Seed 15.1 15.5 16.3 17.8 19.9 20.4 2.5% Manufactured inputsc 55.0 49.0 49.6 57.5 60.3 60.6 0.6% Fertilizer & lime 22.5 20.1 21.0 25.1 26.6 26.5 -0.4% Fuels & oils 16.2 12.7 13.2 15.6 16.0 15.7 -1.5% Electricity 4.5 4.6 4.6 4.9 4.8 5.3 9.6% Pesticides 11.7 11.5 10.7 11.8 12.9 13.1 2.1% Total interest charges 15.4 15.0 14.6 13.9 14.6 15.1 3.0% Short-term interest 6.6 6.4 6.1 5.1 5.5 6.7 22.3% Real-estate interest 8.8 8.6 8.5 8.7 9.1 8.3 -8.7% Other operating exp.d 93.4 88.8 85.5 89.2 94.0 105.1 11.8% Repair & maintenance 14.8 14.7 14.8 15.5 17.1 17.7 3.6% Hired & contract labor 30.0 28.9 27.4 27.1 27.5 30.5 10.8% Custom work 4.1 3.9 4.3 4.0 4.4 4.5 1.7% Marketing, storage, etc. 10.1 10.3 10.3 10.3 10.5 12.2 16.2% Miscellaneous 34.3 31.0 28.7 32.4 34.6 40.3 16.6% 49.0 50.3 54.2 55.8 59.0 61.5 4.2% Capital consumption 28.7 30.1 30.7 32.1 33.4 33.8 1.1% Property taxes 10.7 10.4 10.8 11.3 11.8 12.3 3.7% Non-operator net rent 9.6 9.8 12.7 12.3 13.8 15.4 11.9% 292.6 280.3 285.2 310.6 333.7 352.9 5.7% Item Overhead expensese Total Production Exp. Source: USDA, ERS, Farm Income and Wealth Statistics; updated as of February 11, 2013; available at http://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/farm-income-and-wealth-statistics.aspx. a. Forecast.. Change represents year-to-year change between 2012 and 2013. b. Farm origin inputs include purchases of feed, livestock and poultry, and seed. c. Manufactured inputs include fertilizers and lime, pesticides, petroleum fuel and oils, and electricity. d. Other operating costs include repair and maintenance of capital items, machine hire and custom work, marketing storage, transportation expenses, and other miscellaneous expenses. e. Overhead expenses include property taxes, net rent to a non-operator landlord, and capital consumption. Congressional Research Service 27 Table 4. Annual U.S. Farm Income Since 2006 ($ billions) Item 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012a 2013a Change (%) 1. Cash receipts 240.6 288.5 316.4 289.1 321.1 374.3 391.2 392.9 0.4% Cropsb Livestock 2. Government paymentsc 122.1 118.5 150.1 138.5 174.8 141.6 15.8 11.9 12.2 168.9 120.3 12.2 179.6 141.6 12.4 208.3 166.0 10.4 219.6 171.7 10.8 216.3 176.5 10.9 -1.5% 2.8% 4.2% Fixed direct CCPe Marketing Loan Benefitsf Conservation Ad hoc and emergency All otherg 3. Farm-related incomeh 5.1 4.0 1.8 3.0 0.3 1.7 16.8 5.1 1.1 1.1 3.1 0.5 1.0 17.6 5.1 0.7 0.3 3.2 2.1 0.8 21.5 4.7 1.2 1.1 2.8 0.6 1.7 22.0 4.8 0.2 0.1 3.5 3.1 0.7 18.3 4.7 0.0 0.0 3.7 1.3 0.7 26.1 5.0 0.0 0.0 3.7 1.0 1.1 31.3 4.9 0.0 0.0 3.7 1.3 0.9 36.4 -0.4% 0.0% 0.0% 0.6% 21.9% -16.2% 16.1% 4. Gross cash income (1+2+3) 5. Cash expensesi 6. NET CASH INCOME 273.2 204.8 68.4 318.0 240.6 77.4 350.1 261.1 88.9 323.3 247.6 75.6 351.8 252.4 99.4 410.8 276.1 134.7 433.4 297.8 135.6 440.1 316.6 123.5 1.5% 6.3% -8.9% 7. Total gross revenuesj 8. Total production expensesk 9. NET FARM INCOME 290.2 232.7 57.4 339.6 269.5 70.0 377.9 292.6 85.0 343.3 280.3 63.0 365.6 285.2 80.4 428.5 310.6 117.9 446.5 333.7 112.8 481.1 352.9 128.2 7.7% 5.7% 14.0% paymentsd Source: USDA, ERS, Farm Income and Wealth Statistics; U.S. and State Farm Income and Wealth Statistics, updated as of February 11, 2013. a. Data for 2013 are USDA forecasts. Change represents year-to-year change between 2012 and 2013. b. Includes Commodity Credit Corporation loans under the farm commodity support program. c. Government payments reflect payments made directly to all recipients in the farm sector, including landlords. The non-operator landlords’ share is offset by its inclusion in rental expenses paid to these landlords and thus is not reflected in net farm income or net cash income. For more information on U.S. farm commodity programs, see CRS Report RL34594, Farm Commodity Programs in the 2008 Farm Bill; for more information on conservation programs see CRS Report RL34557, Conservation Provisions of the 2008 Farm Bill. d. Direct payments include production flexibility payments of the 1996 Farm Act through 2001, and fixed direct payments under the 2002 Farm Act since 2002. e. CCP = counter-cyclical payments. f. Includes loan deficiency payments (LDP); marketing loan gains (MLG); and commodity certificate exchange gains. g. Peanut quota buyout, milk income loss payments, and other miscellaneous program payments. h. Income from custom work, machine hire, agri-tourism, forest product sales, and other farm sources. i. Excludes depreciation and perquisites to hired labor. j. Gross cash income plus inventory adjustments, the value of home consumption, and the imputed rental value of operator dwellings. k. Cash expenses plus depreciation and perquisites to hired labor. CRS-28 Table 5. Average Annual Income per U.S. Household, Farm versus All, 2006-2013F ($ per household) 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011F 2012F 2013F Average U.S. Farm Income by Source On-Farm Income $8,541 $11,364 $9,764 $6,866 $11,788 $14,623 $13,922 $10,421 Off-Farm income $72,502 $77,432 $70,032 $70,302 $72,671 $72,655 $75,177 $78,155 Total Farm income $81,043 $88,796 $79,796 $77,169 $84,459 $87,278 $89,099 $88,576 Average U.S. Household Income Farm Household Income as Share of U.S. Avg. Household Income (%) $66,570 $67,609 $68,424 $67,976 $67,530 $67,677 na na 122% 131% 117% 114% 125% 125% na na Source: USDA, ERS, Farm Household Income and Characteristics, principal farm operator household finances, data set updated as of February 11, 2013; at http://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/farm-household-income-and-characteristics.aspx. Note: Data for 2012 and 2013 are USDA forecasts. Table 6. Average Annual Farm Sector Debt-to-Asset Ratio, 2006-2013F ($ billions) 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011F 2012F 2013F Farm Assets 1,923.6 2,055.3 2,023.3 2,054.4 2,190.9 2,383.9 2,536.4 2,732.4 Farm Debt 203.6 214.1 241.6 241.9 251.6 254.1 268.9 277.4 Farm Equity 1,720.0 1,841.2 1,781.7 1,812.5 1,939.3 2,129.8 2,267.5 2,455.0 Debt-to-Asset Ratio (%) 10.6% 10.4% 11.9% 11.8% 11.5% 10.7% 10.6% 10.2% Source: USDA, ERS, Farm Income and Wealth Statistics; U.S. and State Farm Income and Wealth Statistics, updated as of February 11, 2013; available at http://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/farm-income-and-wealth-statistics.aspx. Note: Data for 2012 are preliminary, 2013 are USDA forecasts. CRS-29 Table 7. U.S. Prices and Support Rates for Selected Farm Commodities Since 2007/08 Marketing Year 2013/14Pb % change from 2012/13d 2012 Loan Ratee 2012 Target Price Commoditya Unit Year 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13Fb % change from 2011/12c Wheat $/bu Jun-May 6.48 6.78 4.87 5.70 7.24 7.70-8.10 9.1% — — 2.75 3.92 Corn $/bu Sep-Aug 4.20 4.06 3.55 5.18 6.22 6.75-7.65 15.8% — 1.95 2.63 Sorghum $/bu Sep-Aug 4.08 3.20 3.22 5.02 5.99 6.70-7.60 19.4% — 1.95 2.57 Barley $/bu Jun-May 4.02 5.37 4.66 3.86 5.35 6.15-6.65 19.6% — 1.85 2.44 Oats $/bu Jun-May 2.63 3.15 2.02 2.52 3.49 3.60-4.00 8.9% 1.33 1.44 Rice $/cwt Aug-Jul 12.80 16.80 14.40 12.70 14.50 14.60-15.20 2.8% 6.50 10.50 Soybeans $/bu Sep-Aug 10.10 9.97 9.59 11.30 12.50 13.55-15.05 14.2% 5.00 5.80 Soybean oil ¢/lb Oct-Sep 52.0 32.16 35.95 53.20 51.90 49.0-53.0 -1.7% — — Soybean meal $/st Oct-Sep 335.9 331.2 311.27 345.52 393.53 430-460 13.1% — — — — — — — Cotton, Upland ¢/lb Aug-Jul 59.3 47.8 62.9 81.50 88.3 69-73 -19.6% — — — — — — — — — — 52.00 71.25 Choice Steers $/cwt Jan-Dec 91.8 92.27 83.25 95.38 114.73 122.86 7.1% 125-134 5.4% — — Barrows/Gilts $/cwt Jan-Dec 47.1 47.84 41.24 55.06 66.11 60.88 -7.9% 61-65 3.5% — — Broilers ¢/lb Jan-Dec 76.4 79.7 77.60 82.90 79.0 86.6 8.4% 92-98 9.7% — — Eggs ¢/doz Jan-Dec 114.4 128.3 103.0 106.30 115.3 117.4 1.8% 113-120 -0.8% — — Milk $/cwt Jan-Dec 19.13 18.29 12.83 16.26 20.14 18.51 -8.1% 18.90-19.60 4.0% — — Source: Various USDA agency sources as described in the notes below. a. Season average farm price for grains and oilseeds are from USDA, National Agricultural Statistical Service, Agricultural Prices. Calendar year data are for the first year, for example, 2000/2001 = 2000; F = forecast and P = projection from World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) February 8, 2013;—= no value; and USDA’s out-year 2013/2014 crop price forecasts will first appear in the May 2013 WASDE report. Soybean and livestock product prices are from USDA, Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS): soybean oil—Decatur, IL, cash price, simple avg. crude; soybean meal—Decatur, IL, cash price, simple avg. 48% protein; choice steers— Nebraska, direct 1100-1300 lbs.; barrows/gilts—national base, live equivalent 51%-52% lean; broilers—wholesale, 12-city avg.; eggs—Grade A, New York, volume buyers; and milk—simple avg. of prices received by farmers for all milk. b. Data for 2012/2013 are USDA forecasts; 2013/2014 data are USDA projections. c. Percent change from 2011/2012, calculated using the difference from the midpoint of the range for 2012/2013 with the estimate for 2011/2012. d. Percent change from 2012/2013, calculated using the difference from the midpoint of the range for 2013/2014 with the estimate for 2012/2013. e. Loan rate and target prices are for the 2012/2013 crop year. For more information, see CRS Report RL34594, Farm Commodity Programs in the 2008 Farm Bill. CRS-30 U.S. Farm Income Author Contact Information Randy Schnepf Specialist in Agricultural Policy rschnepf@crs.loc.gov, 7-4277 Congressional Research Service 31