Lodi News-Sentinel

Minnesota farmers adjust to lower crop prices with ripple effects throughout rural economies

- By Tom Meersman

MINNEAPOLI­S — Ed McNamara sat in the driver’s seat of his John Deere combine recently, musing about crop prices as he mowed through six rows of corn at a time.

Thousands of Minnesota farmers have withstood stubbornly low crop prices during the past 27 months, and farmers’ average net income has been dropping steadily for the past three years. McNamara, who has been farming just south of the Twin Cities near Goodhue since 1978, has seen the farm economy cycle up and down several times and knows the drill when profit margins are slim to none.

“Tighten your belt, cut back on inputs but don’t hurt your yield, run machinery a little bit longer, and try to get the best deal for supplies,” he said, including seed, fertilizer and other chemicals.

As farmers cut back, the doldrums caused by lackluster prices for crops and livestock have started to ripple onto the main streets of rural Minnesota. When farmers have less money to spend, it affects anyone who is selling farm equipment, marketing fertilizer, or building new barns, bins and sheds.

Low commodity prices also put a squeeze on cash rents for land that many retired farmers or their families depend on for income.

Successful farmers were adjusting their budgets even before corn prices dropped below $4 per bushel in mid-2014, considered to be near the break-even point for many producers.

Many hope to salvage marginal profits in 2016 thanks to generally good weather and record or near-record yields forecast for the second consecutiv­e year.

But David Preisler, executive director of the Minnesota Pork Producers Associatio­n, said the direct effects of weak crop and livestock prices show up quickly in many small towns.

“The first ripple effect you see is going to be any sort of capital purchases that are more discretion­ary in nature,” he said.

New data released by University of Minnesota professor and Extension economist Bill Lazarus confirm some of that slowdown. He analyzed spending by more than 1,000 producers across the state on machinery and equipment, farm buildings, fertilizer and land rent.

The average spending for machinery and equipment in 2012 and 2013, when crop prices peaked, was about $117,000 per farm. That plummeted to about $67,500 in 2014 and $48,000 in 2015. Farm building purchases such as grain bins and hog barns had a similar drop-off, from about $36,000 per farm in 2013 to $21,000 in 2014 and $16,000 in 2015.

The report also found that fertilizer purchases fell more than 14 percent from 2013 to 2014 before rebounding slightly in 2015. And land rent, which typically lags behind the ups and downs of crop prices, increased in the two years after crop prices peaked, but last year fell about 3 percent.

AGCO, a major farm machinery manufactur­er in Jackson, Minn., is feeling the pinch. In a quarterly report late last month, AGCO’s North American net sales were down nearly 10 percent for the first nine months of 2016 compared with the same period last year. Large tractor sales were down 11 percent, and sales of combines were down 20 percent. The company said that sales of smaller equipment were up slightly.

Big machinery makers John Deere and Caterpilla­r also reported declines in sales due to softness in ag and constructi­on markets.

“The biggest driver of our business is definitely farm income,” said Greg Peterson, AGCO’s director of investor relations. “So where commodity prices are certainly play a big part of that.”

Peterson said the company has adjusted to the pullback in business by cutting costs across the board and slowing production at its plant in southweste­rn Minnesota. That meant laying off about 10 percent of its workforce in 2015, he said, and another 10 percent in 2016. The plant currently employs about 850 workers, Peterson said.

Slowdowns in farm country during down cycles don’t surprise mayors, including Dave Smiglewski of Granite Falls, a small western Minnesota city.

“Every farmer is basically running a business,” he said, “and every one of those businesses is an important economic contributo­r to the life of the community.”

Besides the decline in big ticket purchases, Smiglewski said that crop prices affect the value of farmland. When corn and soybean prices reached record levels in 2011 and 2012, he said, land values jumped and cities and school districts received more of their tax revenue from ag land.

Now that land values have plateaued or even declined a bit, Smiglewski said, things are changing again. “We’re now seeing the tax burden shift back in-town, toward city properties and away from the rural properties,” he said.

Smiglewski said it’s more difficult to track some of the other ripple effects that may affect a small community’s economy. A generation ago, he said, less disposable income for farmers would have meant fewer trips to the local hardware store or less money spent at downtown stores and restaurant­s.

But now producers may buy parts and equipment online, direct from the manufactur­er, he said. And many of their families have shifted their shopping to larger stores and supermarke­ts in regional centers.

Harold Wolle, president of the Minnesota Corn Growers Associatio­n, said the effects of weak farm prices, while difficult to track, are still immense.

“Production ag is a tremendous part of Minnesota’s economy, and particular­ly the rural economy,” he said.

If low prices persist well into 2017, Wolle said farmers with equity and experience will tough it out, while beginning farmers or those who have aggressive­ly expanded and paid high rents will be more vulnerable.

 ?? RICHARD TSONG-TAATARII/ MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE ?? Ed McNamara is a one-man farming crew as he sets off to harvest his 200 acres of corn. He uses an older Deere combine which he owns and maintains.
RICHARD TSONG-TAATARII/ MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE Ed McNamara is a one-man farming crew as he sets off to harvest his 200 acres of corn. He uses an older Deere combine which he owns and maintains.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States