Farm
employment. Sharp increases in labor productivity—from
rising efficiency due to the use of farm machinery, pesticides,
fuel, and fertilizers as well as technological improvements
in plant breeding and animal husbandry—are largely
behind the dramatic decline in farm employment relative
to total U.S. employment between 1948 and 1970. In contrast,
during 1970 to 1995, when total employment grew faster
in the U.S. than in any other major developed country,
farm employment was relatively stable. Farm households
have become increasingly dependent on off-farm income (keeping
people in farming that would otherwise have left) and expanded
use of hired farm labor (as the average age of farm operators
increased). Changes in population estimates (with the 2000
Census) and accelerated emigration out of farming may account
for the recent sharp drop in farm employment relative to
total employment.
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