Bad economy? Farmers have one of best years ever

By JIM SUHR   Monday, Dec. 12, 2011
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In a photo taken Oct. 31, 2011, central Illinois farmer Dale Hadden poses on the family farm near Jacksonville, Ill. Hadden's farming operation is doing especially well this year for any of a number of reasons and will use this as an opportunity to funnel some of these profits into new machinery and paying off some land.

In a photo taken Oct. 31, 2011, central Illinois farmer Dale Hadden poses on the family farm near Jacksonville, Ill. Hadden's farming operation is doing especially well this year for any of a number of reasons and will use this as an opportunity to funnel some of these profits into new machinery and paying off some land.

— An Illinois farmer made so much money this year he made loan payments on one tractor a year in advance and exchanged some older ones for newer models. An Iowa farmer upgraded his combine and also paid off debt, while an elderly Oregon farmer poured into retirement funds a bundle of his $2 million take from a well-timed sale of much of his turf and equipment.

While much of America worries about the possibility of a double-dip recession, such stories of prosperity are cropping up as U.S. farmers enjoy their best run in decades, thanks to high prices for many crops, livestock and farmland and strong global demand for corn used in making ethanol.

Farm profits are expected to spike by 28 percent this year to $100.9 billion, and the amount of cash farms have available to pay bills also is expected to top $100 billion — the first time both measures have done so, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. All the while, crop sales are expected to pass the $200 billion mark for the first time in U.S. history, and double-digit increases are expected in livestock sales.

"We're just experiencing the best of times," said Bruce Johnson, an agricultural economist at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln. "It's a story to tell."

That's not to say that everyone is sharing in the good fortune. Near Gardner, Kan., a short drive south of Kansas City, a lack of rain and nagging winds conspired to leave Bill Voigts with about half of the soybeans he expected. His harvest of corn was worse, coming in at about one-third of his normal production. Even with insurance, he didn't quite break even on the 2,400 acres he farms — most of them rented.

"Had it not been for insurance in his area, it'd be a disaster. That's the only thing that saves us," said Voigts, 66.

But he noted that the drought plaguing farmers like him helped drive up prices for commodities like corn, soybeans and wheat, benefitting those fortunate enough to get a good crop.

"At the expense of some farmers, other farmers become wealthy," he said. "That's really the whole story. That's not the government's fault, it's nobody's fault. That's just the way things happen.

"Some people got left behind."

Yet most of the talk about U.S. farming remains bullish, with analysts widely trumpeting "the new normal" in U.S. agriculture: Demand in China, India and other developing countries for U.S. agricultural exports — and hunger for corn for ethanol — has been keeping prices high and farming profitable.

In central Illinois' Morgan County near Jacksonville, Dale Hadden says he was "pleasantly surprised" by the corn and soybeans he got from the some 4,000 acres he works with his brother and their parents, considering they lost about 400 acres of corn to 21 inches of rain in June.

All told, Hadden estimated his crops were worth 10 percent to 15 percent more than in previous years, amounting to tens of thousands of dollars. He spent a chunk of that on an advance full-year payment on a seven-year loan on one of his tractors and to pay down debt on land.

Much of the rest he cautiously set aside.

"It was a successful year," said Hadden, a 38-year-old with two children, ages 11 and 9. "But most farmers would tell you that just because you're flush with cash, you don't spend it all."

In Oregon, 79-year-old Warren Haught sure didn't. With four decades of farming under his belt, Haught — socked by the high cost of electricity to irrigate crops in high desert country — unloaded his 1,500-acre operation a couple of years ago. He pocketed $1.7 million on the land sale and $300,000 from liquidating everything from haying equipment to plows and tractors, using some of proceeds on two new homes — one of him, the other for his son and his family — while saving much of the rest.

"It was a pretty good deal at the time," said Haught, who now has just 72 acres near mountainous Klamath Falls on which he grows alfalfa and grass crops. He'd like to get at least 100 more acres, saying demand for hay in China and other Pacific Rim countries is boosting prices.

"It was kind of the perfect storm — what you had this year brought a good price," he said. "Everything seemed to be a good price."

In western Iowa near Kingsley, Jeff Reinking and his brother — partners in a 2,500-acre operation evenly split between corn and beans — recently traded in a 2006 combine for one three years newer — spoils from what Reinking called "the best year for me." He also paid off some debt and put some money aside in case things aren't always so rosy.

"I guess we're getting the better end of things right now," Reinking said. "That has not always been the case."

reader COMMENTS
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(21)
Mouse
Dec 12, 2011 at 8:21 p.m.
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robot, don't you live on Lego bricks?

Gandalf
Dec 12, 2011 at 7:46 p.m.
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Robot, by the way, I do work for a living, a lot.

Gandalf
Dec 12, 2011 at 7:45 p.m.
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Robot, OUCH! I like you, too... Why don't you say something of intelligence sometime?

Robot_Lord_of_Tokyo
Dec 12, 2011 at 7:09 p.m.
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Let the people who don't work for a living cut down the people who provide the food they recieve from the food bank. So shall it be written, so shall it be done.

Robot_Lord_of_Tokyo
Dec 12, 2011 at 7:07 p.m.
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Gandalf, go hang. Farmers, GO!!

Gandalf
Dec 12, 2011 at 4:28 p.m.
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Now's the time to repeal Wisconsin's Use Value law that drastically lowers farm property taxes to the detriment of residential property owners who are stuck making-up the difference. The current law is unfair and must be changed. Besides that, I'm happy for the farmers.

westorbust
Dec 12, 2011 at 4:11 p.m.
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:rollseyes: sure, "all" rich people have earned every penny they get. Blanket generalizations are useless. Bayer used concentration camp slaves to experiment on to get to where they are today. I can give you a horrible exploitive story behind major businesses for every flowery one you can come up with.
------
BTW, good for the farmers, but what about those subsidies?

rprp
Dec 12, 2011 at 4:08 p.m.
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With all the huge subsidies, huge tax breaks, huge grants and so many other laws at different levels of government that benefit farmers what do you expect.

Olderandornerier
Dec 12, 2011 at 3:08 p.m.
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Sure is, how else could he get his cronies paying for it so they could spread propaganda.

Mouse
Dec 12, 2011 at 3:03 p.m.
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Olderandornerier...... is that the station Walker defunded??

Olderandornerier
Dec 12, 2011 at 12:33 p.m.
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Watch a little PBS Mouse, you might just learn something, or is PBS too right wing for you?

tjncj
Dec 12, 2011 at noon
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Actually Mouse, they were stamped out by Earl Tupper from scrap pieces of plastic he was given to by his employer DuPont. He went to work for Dupont after his initial entrepreneurship was forced to bankruptcy by the Great Depression. They gave him bad plastic and he invented and produced it in his garage.

Lost his business, picked himself up by his bootstraps and created a bigger business. As they say, the rest is history.

Mouse
Dec 12, 2011 at 11:26 a.m.
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...yes and Mrs. Tupperware stamped out all her own bowls and lids.
Give me a break. Next you will be telling me Herman Cain delivers his own pizzas!

saxcat70
Dec 12, 2011 at 10:33 a.m.
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say it isn't so Older....are you trying to tell these people that the rich folks (all republicans to them) actually worked for what they have?????

Olderandornerier
Dec 12, 2011 at 10:28 a.m.
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The people who started Libby's (Libby McNeil and Libby) and Green Giant (Minnesota Valley Canning Company) were hands on when they began business. Heinz is another example of a hands on start up. If you go back far enough, you will find the vast majority of businesses were hands on start ups from the owners. Boeing helped build and test fly his first planes. He was wealthy to start from inheritance, but worked hands on all the same. Thank you PBS. (And the David H. Koch Foundation for their support of PBS programming).

As hard as it is to believe for some people, most worked to get where they are at.

Mouse
Dec 12, 2011 at 9:26 a.m.
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RAF...... even mouse will share his cheese with you on this one!
How long have they been getting money from tax payers? Plus how big are some of these "quote" teachers...sorry, i mean farmers?
(The so called farmers in suit and tie who have never touched one ounce of dirt, like Mr and Mrs Libby's or Mr Jolly G. Giant.)

lovemycountry
Dec 12, 2011 at 9:09 a.m.
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$5 billion+ in our tax money to pay for corn. Half of which goes to make ethanol, costing us even more in subsidies, and with the end result of raising our food prices. Scotty, beam me up.

tthompson
Dec 12, 2011 at 8:59 a.m.
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Your expectations of the media are to high raf

RetiredAirForce
Dec 12, 2011 at 8:37 a.m.
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That whole article and not one mention of subsides or demand pushed by government policy.

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