Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

In farm census, more women in control

- By Lydia Mulvany, Kevin Varley and Cedric Sam Bloomberg News

As the average U.S. farmer ages, more women are stepping up as decision makers to help feed a booming global population.

The number of female producers increased 27 percent in the five years through 2017, according to the first new federal census of U.S. farms since 2012. More farms are reporting that multiple individual­s are involved in decision making, with total producers increasing 6.9 percent from 2012.

While women have always played important roles on family farms, more are now running the operation, and showing up in new markets for niche crops and organic produce.

“The glass ceiling is getting cracked and busted here and there in a lot of ways,” said Renee Strickland, who co-owns a cowcalf operation as well as a business exporting live animals in Myakka City, Fla. “The tide is simply going to turn because of the enrollment in colleges of more women than men.”

The USDA has changed the way it reports on producer informatio­n in an “attempt to better represent all people involved in farmdecisi­on making,” the agency said.

Here are some other highlights from the census:

■ Aging farmers: Farmers are getting older. The average age climbed to 57.5 in 2017, up 1.2 years from five years earlier, according to the census. Producers tend to have a couple of decades of experience under their belt, and about 74 percent live on their farm.

However, the more money a farm makes, the younger the age of the producers, on average. On operations with $1 million or more in sales, the average age is 53.8. The oldest class of farmers at an average 58.8 years old pull in farm revenues of $10,000 to $24,999.

Data skew older on age, because the government’s definition of a farmer is extremely broad and includes people who don’t have commercial operations, said Scott Irwin, an agricultur­al economist at University of Illinois.

■ Racial diversity: As the farming community gets more gender diverse, the racial makeup remains largely white. The number of Hispanic farmers increased 13 percent, but just to 112,451, while the number of black farmers rose about 2 percent to 45,508. About 3.2 million farmers are white, or 95 percent of the total. In the broader U.S. population, about 77 percent are white.

Fewer profitable farms: The census data just go through 2017 and show that even before the U.S.-China trade war kicked in, it became hard to make money through farming. Years of bumper crops have lead to bulging inventorie­s. Relatively good growing weather has helped production expand across the global at a time when gains in crop technology also helped to boost yields. The bottom line is ample supplies are keeping prices stuck in a rut.

Between 2012 and 2017, farms reporting net losses rose 1.2 percent to 1.15 million. That’s more than the number reporting net profits, which dropped 8.3 percent over the period to 891,329.

■ Farm consolidat­ion: American agricultur­e continues to consolidat­e with the number of farms declining about 3.3 percent to 2.04 million. Mega-operations, with sales of $5 million or more, accounted for 35 percent of all sales, compared with 32 percent in 2012.

Consolidat­ion is “the story of capitalism,” U.S. Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue said to reporters after the census data were released.

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