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Briefing Rooms

Farm Structure: Questions and Answers

Q. How many minority farmers are there?

A. Minority farm operators, however defined, make up a small share of all U.S. farmers. Most minority farmers operate small farms, although most small farms are not operated by minorities. Census of agriculture data are often used to examine the characteristics of minority operators. Although other sources of data provide information on minority farmers, census data extend further into the past and provide reliable statistics for very small minorities, particularly at the State level.

Obtaining a count of minority farmers is difficult because some of the groups overlap. According to the 1997 Census of Agriculture, 47,700 farm operators, or 2.5 percent of all U.S. farm operators, were nonwhite. These included 18,500 Blacks, 10,600 American Indians, 8,700 Asians or Pacific Islanders, and 9,800 “others.” About 27,700 Hispanics also farmed. Approximately 9,000 of the Hispanic operators, however, are also included in the nonwhite count, since Hispanics may be of any race.

Although women are a majority in the U.S. population, they are a minority among farm operators. Only 165,100 farm operators, or 8.6 percent of the U.S. total, were women in 1997, but their numbers are increasing. Of these, 5,100 were included in the nonwhite count and 2,500 were Hispanic. The Census Bureau counts only one primary operator per farm; it does not classify women who farm alongside their husbands as operators, unless they are the primary operators.

References

Minority & Women Farmers in the U.S.—Farms operated by Blacks and by women are generally smaller in acreage and in sales than the national average, while Asian and Pacific Islander farms average more than double the average of sales for all U.S. farms. Agricultural Outlook (05/98).

Limited-Resource Farmers: Their Risk Management NeedsSocially disadvantaged, small, and limited-opportunity farmers tend not to purchase crop insurance nor to participate in insurance-type programs operated by USDA. This articles traces the reasons why. Agricultural Outlook (05/97).

Racial/Ethnic Minorities in Rural Areas: Progress and Stagnation—Rural minorities lag rural Whites and urban minorities on many crucial economic and social measures. This report examines rural Black, Hispanic, Native American, and Asian/Pacific Islander populations and their economic well-being in the 1980s, an economically difficult decade for rural areas. AER731 (08/96).

For more information, contact: Robert Hoppe

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: July 9, 2002