USDA Economic Research Service Briefing Room
" "  
Link: Bypass USDA Left navigation.
Search ERS

Browse by Subject
Diet, Health & Safety
Farm Economy
Farm Practices & Management
Food & Nutrition Assistance
Food Sector
Natural Resources & Environment
Policy Topics
Research & Productivity
Rural Economy
Trade and International Markets
Also Browse By


or

""

 


 
Briefing Rooms

Farm Structure: Questions and Answers

Q. How do changes in farm structure affect the distribution of farm payments?

A. In recent decades, the production of commodities traditionally covered by farm programs (largely grains and oilseeds) has shifted to larger farms, with farm size measured by the level of sales. This means that commodity program payments have also shifted to larger grain and oilseed farms, because payments are based on planting and yield histories. The shift in production to larger farms means that commodity payments have shifted to households with higher incomes. No explicit policy changes led to these changes in the distribution of payments. They resulted from ongoing structural changes in farming.

Data Sources and Farm Classification

Using data from USDA’s Agricultural Resource Management Survey (ARMS) and its predecessor, the Farms Costs and Returns Survey (FCRS), we sort family farms into five size classes, with sales expressed in 2002 dollars, using the Producer Price Index (PPI) for Farm Products. All nonfamily farms are assigned to a sixth class. Sales are expressed in 2002 dollars in order to account for price changes. Consistent data from the two surveys are available from 1989 forward, and we use ARMS/FCRS data for 1989, 1991, 1997, and 2002. Using this farm classification and the ARMS/FCRS data, we can trace changes in the distribution of production and farm program payments from 1989 to 2002.

Agricultural Production is Shifting to Larger Farms

A striking shift in production occurred between 1989 and 2002. Farms in the largest sales class (at least $500,000 in 2002 dollars) accounted for 43.9 percent of production in 2002, up from 28.9 percent in 1989, the earliest year for which we have consistent data. There were 64,000 farms in that size class in 2002, up from 32,000 in 1989. The shift to large family-operated farms was almost precisely mirrored by a decline in the share of production by farms with between $10,000 and $250,000 in sales. Their share of production fell from roughly 44 percent in 1989 to 29 percent in 2002. Most agricultural production continues to occur on family-operated farms; nonfamily farms accounted for just 8.5 percent of the value of production in 2002.

Share of value of production (vop), by size class, by year


The trend to larger farms is sectorwide. The shift of livestock production to larger operations is well known and quite dramatic, with major shifts of hog, dairy, and poultry production toward farms with sales of $500,000 or more.

Livestock consolidation is well known

But shifts in production toward the largest farms have also occurred for such crops as cash grains and soybeans, tobacco, cotton, and peanuts.

But crops are also shifting to large farms

Acreage data from the last four censuses of agriculture trace shifts in farm size for seven commodities: barley, corn, cotton, rice, sorghum, soybeans, and wheat. Each commodity shows a steady shift of acreage toward larger farms (at least 1,000 harvested acres) over time, with the large farm share increasing by 100 to 300 percent between 1987 and 2002.

Harvested acreage in farms with at least 1,000 harvested acres of the commodity

We expect these changes in farm structure to continue, for two reasons. First, the share of those age 65 years and older among operators of smaller commercial farms, those with sales between $10,000 and $250,000, has risen sharply in the last two decades. Many are near retirement. Second, the ARMS indicates that larger farms continue to realize higher profits. Operating profit margins were negative, on average, for small farms (sales below $250,000) in 2002, and rose steadily as farm sales increased.

Operating profit margins, by sales class, 2002

Commodity Payments Are Shifting to Larger Farms

Commodity policies have traditionally provided support to producers of selected commodities, principally grains and oilseeds. Consequently, farms that produce high-value crops, cattle, and hogs do not draw government commodity payments (unless they also produce program commodities or have a history of producing program commodities), and many of those farms are quite large. However, over time, commodity payments have shifted [along with production] to larger grain and oilseed farms , since payments are based on planting and yield histories.

Commodity program payments include all commodity-related payments and disaster assistance payments, but exclude environmental payments received under the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) or the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP). Commodity payments are closely tied to production value for certain commodities. For example, family farms with sales between $100,000 and $249,999 received 27.2 percent of commodity program payments in 2002, and accounted for 27.3 percent of the value of production of eight program commodities: barley, corn, cotton, oats, rice, sorghum, soybeans, and wheat.

Commodity program payments closely match production of selected commodities

As the largest farms expanded their share of program crops, government payments shifted sharply toward those farms. Farms with less than $250,000 in production value received 66.3 percent of commodity payments in 1989; by 2002, farms in those size classes received 46.5 percent of payments. Farms with at least $500,000 in sales received 27.4 percent of all commodity payments in 2002, up from 11.7 percent 13 years earlier.

Government commodity payments shift to larger farms

Operators of the Largest Farms Have Higher Incomes

Although small farms account for a shrinking share of production and generally report negative income from farming, small farm operators are not, in general, poor. As a group, farm household incomes compare favorably to average U.S. household income; mean farm household income matches or exceeds the mean for the U.S. population ($57,900) in every size class.

The largest farms have much higher household incomes

Small farm households derive almost all of their income from off-farm work, nonfarm businesses, and other income, such as pensions and financial investments. Almost 80 percent of the smallest farm households report negative incomes from farming, but those losses are generally offset by substantial off-farm income such that their total income is generally above national averages. Many other households operate small but still significant farming operations (with annual sales up to $250,000), and they frequently combine a profitable farm business with off-farm employment to generate household incomes that match or exceed national averages.

Because of the important role of off-farm income, household incomes do not vary much, on average, as farm size increases to $250,000 in sales. Incomes for households in the next size group ($250,000-$499,999 in sales) are clearly higher, but the difference is not great. However, operators of the largest farms ($500,000 and over) earn more than twice the income of other farms.

Commodity Payments Shifting to Higher Income Households

With farm production and commodity payments shifting to the largest farms, commodity payments are also shifting to higher income households. We detail the shift in three ways.

  • The following figure shows the household income that splits the distribution of commodity payments by income—that is, the income level at which half of commodity payments went to higher income households and half to lower income households. We report this figure for 1989, 1991, 1996, and 2002. The income levels are in 2002 dollars, and are adjusted for inflation with the Consumer Price Index (CPI). In 1989, half of commodity payments went to households earning more than $46,661 (in 2002 dollars). That income level was about the same in 1991, during a recession, and then began to rise sharply to reach $60,580 in 2002, an increase of 30 percent. For comparison, we also report the median income among all U.S. households, also in 2002 dollars. It also increased during the period, but by less than 5 percent, from $40,484 to $42,409.

Thus commodity payments are shifting to higher income households

  • The lowest line in the next figure repeats the previous figure by reporting the income at the median of the payments distribution, at which half of payments go to higher income households and half go to lower income households. But it also reports two other points on the distribution of commodity payments, the 75th and 90 percentiles, all again in 2002 dollars. In 1989, an income level of $98,511 formed the 75th percentile of the payments distribution (one quarter of payments went to higher income households), while the 90th percentile was at $185,767 (one tenth of payments went to higher income households). By 2002, the 75th and 90th percentiles had risen sharply, to $130,277 and $265,682.

The shift is greater at extreme percentiles

  • The final figure holds income levels constant through time, and reports how payments shifted among households in different income categories. In 1989, households with incomes of less than $50,000 received 52 percent of all commodity payments. Their share fell by 9 percentage points, to 43 percent, by 2002. In turn, households with income in excess of $100,000 increased their share of commodity payments by 7 percentage points from 24.6 percent to 32.5 percent.

Another view of the shift in payments: share of commodity payments, by household, income level

Because household incomes do not rise sharply among operators of farms with less than $500,000 in sales, shifts in production to larger farms within these size classes do not shift commodity payments to noticeably higher income households. What is driving the patterns in the last three figures is shifts in production to the largest class of farms, those with sales of $500,000 or more, whose households have substantially higher incomes. As discussed earlier, the largest farms have rapidly increasing shares of production of program crops. However, their shares of production are still modest. Their shares can grow considerably more.

Commodity payments shifted sharply to higher income households from 1989 to 2002, and we expect that process to continue along with the continued shift of production to larger farms and higher income households. No explicit policy changes led to this shift in payments. Rather, they are driven by ongoing structural changes in farming.

For more information, contact: Jim MacDonald, Robert Hoppe or David Banker

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: February 8, 2005