according to the Farm Income Forecast figures released yesterday by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Economic Research Service. The ERS releases and updates the forecast three times a year; this is the first such prediction for 2019.
"If accurate, the total would be the third year of net income below $70 billion since 2015," Chuck Abbott reports for Successful Farming. "Farm income in 2019 will be far below the halcyon levels of early this decade, when a seven-year commodity boom propelled income to a record $123.4 billion in 2013 before collapsing due to abundant harvests worldwide."
The figures could signal a new, much lower, normal for American farms. Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said in House testimony last week that expanding global trade and other "trade challenges" (possibly read: the tariff war) will continue to keep commodity prices low in the U.S., Abbott reports.
Despite this, the agriculture sector is financially sound, some analysts say. "In this, its first forecast of 2019 farm income, the USDA said that higher market prices would mean larger crop and livestock receipts for producers than last year. Livestock production also is expected to rise, helping to generate revenue," Abbott reports. "Production expenses will rise fractionally, and government payments, which hit a 12-year high of $13.8 billion in 2018, are projected to fall by $2.3 billion. Termination of the so-called Trump tariff payments would account for most of the decline in government payments."
And though farm debt is increasing, so are farm assets. The USDA predicts the debt-to-asset ration will be 13.9 percent this year: still an increase, but "comparatively low," Abbott reports. The next net farm income forecast will be released on Aug. 30.
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/2SQ9mhk USDA predicts net farm income will stay under $70 billion for third year in a row; possibly a 'new normal' - Entrepreneur Generations
0 Response to "USDA predicts net farm income will stay under $70 billion for third year in a row; possibly a 'new normal' - Entrepreneur Generations"
Post a Comment