Latest Forecast for Farm Income Shows a Slight Bump

Latest Forecast for Farm Income Shows a Slight Bump

Russell Nemetz
Russell Nemetz
With your Land and Livestock Report on the Ag Information Network of the West, I'm Russell Nemetz.

The recent projections of farm income released by USDA's Economic Research Service in their 2017 Farm Sector Income Forecast suggest that while farm income may have hit rock bottom in 2016, there will be an uptick in both net farm and net cash income in 2017. The American Farm Bureau Federation Chief Economist Dr. Bob Young says livestock sales are driving the slight increase.

"It is just kind of a minor bump, but is a bump as opposed to continuing to fall. The livestock side really drove most of that increase. The crop revenue side, crop receipts, are effectively flat, 2017 relative to 2016."

Forecasts for both livestock and crop cash receipts are promising. Livestock cash receipts will increase by 4.8 percent and crop cash receipts will increase by 1.6 percent in 2017. With an increase predicted though, Dr. Young cautions that the year's overall farm income is hard to predict.

"We've got some of the strongest demand we've ever had, but we also have some of the strongest production that we've ever had. So, probably would take a little bit of a production pullback for prices to really pop, but wouldn't take much of a production pullback for that to happen."

Again, that was the American Farm Bureau Federation Chief Economist Dr. Bob Young.

That's your Land and Livestock Report-I'm Russell Nemetz.

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