Obviously the headlines lately about doom and gloom on Wall Street, and
But amidst the Hooverville talk, there was an underlying assumption that the Farm Belt was faring far better, and in fact was one of the very few bright lights in the current
That assumption was shattered Wednesday when I saw this big story in the Wall Street Journal that the proverbial glory days for farmers are at their end. For those who can’t access the WSJ subscription link, here are a few excerpts:
“The Midwest faces plunging crop prices and stubbornly high production costs. Corn prices have dropped from $7.54 a bushel around July Fourth in central Iowa to just $3.81 a bushel on Tuesday. But growers are hearing from suppliers that fertilizer and seed costs could rise by more than 40% each for next spring’s plantings”
“U.S. growers clearly face a riskier, more volatile environment in which to make bets on what to grow and how much. “I was finally enjoying farming, but it’s real scary right now,” said Keith Richert, a 38-year-old York, Neb., corn and soybean farmer who is shelving plans to replace his eight-year-old harvesting combine, a purchase that would cost more than $300,000”
“For many growers, their breakeven costs have climbed so high that they could lose money next year even if crop prices are above the levels long thought to be too strong to warrant subsidy checks from the U.S. government. Farm trade groups and Farm Belt politicians already are pressing the Bush administration to interpret the newly adopted five-year farm bill generously”
The article also makes a point that I made in this blog just last month, namely, that if you were a crop farmer, 2007 and 2008 have been golden years, but if you were in livestock production, these have already been dark days indeed – and that lower grain prices are actually good news for a significant number of farming operations.
At a time when farm-level milk prices have been dropping steadily, seeing corn return to the $4/bushel level, and dropping soybean and oil prices to boot, is like having a prayer answered just in the nick of time. It just goes to show you that few trends are ever entirely good or bad; it just depends on who’s playing which angle.
A number of livestock and taxpayer groups, including the
[UPDATE NOTE: I see that by some great cosmic coincidence USA Today had essentially the same story Wednesday as the WSJ journal did the same day, also lamenting the decline in crop prices].


