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Data Sets

Farm Balance Sheet

Estimation of State-Level Balance Sheets Has Been Suspended

ERS will continue to publish aggregate sector wide balance sheet estimates at the National level. However, data needed to construct State level balance sheets are no longer available. Based on a thorough review of data used to construct aggregate sector wide farm balance sheets at the State level, ERS has concluded that insufficient data are available to continue to make reliable estimates. For those who wish to examine allocation factors that have been used to develop State-level estimates of debt and assets, the final versions are available in spreadsheet form for assets, real estate and non-real estate debt.

ERS remains committed to producing farm financial data and will continue to publish farm-level balance sheets constructed from data collected through the Agricultural Resource Management Survey (ARMS) for both the U.S. and the 15 States for which a large enough sample exists to produce defensible estimates. Farm-level balance sheets are developed for the farm as a business establishment, which are different from sector wide balance sheets in that they do not include assets owned or debt owed by nonoperator landlords or other participants in the farm sector who are not a part of the ownership structure of the farm business. Estimates of farm business income statements, financial ratios, and debt repayment capacity are developed from annual ARMS data and available for a wide range of farm types and geographic regions through the ARMS web-based data delivery tool, which may be accessed from the ARMS briefing room.

Background

Aggregate sector-wide balance sheets refer to balance sheets constructed to include assets and debts held by operators, landlords and others who provide assets or debt capital for use in farm businesses. All assets or debts are included in the estimate regardless of ownership. This differs from the balance sheet typically constructed for an individual, firm, or household in that it includes assets and debts of multiple parties.

Aggregate sector-wide balance sheet estimates are constructed using a variety of USDA survey and institutional data, which are available for the most part only at the national level. While providing sector level trend statistics, financial indicators developed from the sector-level balance sheets do not provide information about the distribution of either assets or debt among farms, or the financial position of farms or sub-sectors of the agricultural economy.

The Agricultural Resource Management Survey (ARMS) and its predecessor, the Farm Costs and Returns Survey, were developed to fill an information void regarding the distribution of assets, debts, and incomes to support debt service commitments. ARMS is a farm-level establishment survey that does not provide information about assets or debt of land owners, contractors or other participants. Thus, while providing a distributional perspective regarding assets, debts, and financial performance indicators for farm businesses, ARMS does not support the development of all inclusive sector-wide estimates.

Farm Structure and Institutional Changes Reduce the Information Content of some State-level Data Series

Farm businesses have become larger and, as a consequence, use more complex business arrangements such as contracts and joint business ventures since sector-based balance sheets were first estimated. These changes affect who owns assets, who holds debt, and where and how assets and debt are acquired for use in production. The distribution of assets and debt is skewed with larger farms holding a disproportionate share. The 1 percent of farms with $1,000,000 or more in sales owned about 5 percent of acreage and owed over 16 percent of debt in 2003. Meanwhile, farms with less than $100,000 in sales (over 80 percent of all farms) accounted for over half of land owned and owed 42 percent of debt. Households that operated these smaller farms also held over 80 percent of non-farm debt. These distributions have implications for measurement. For example, households with smaller operations tend to engage, as a group, more in off-farm activities. When considering off-farm sources of income, the tendency may be to think about wage or salary income, but over one in ten farm households also operate a non-farm business and around 12 percent of household income in 2003 was from such businesses. It is not clear how the non-farm debt of farm households may be related to their farm business or to business debt reported by lending institutions. If non-farm business assets are secured with farm assets, then household debt for non-farm purposes may be included in debt reported by farm lenders.

Institutional changes have also affected the availability of data to support estimates of sector-wide balance sheets. For example, banking legislation in the 1990s created the opportunity for mergers of financial institutions across State lines. These changes enabled an institution making loans in one area to be headquartered in another area, even another state. This is important to the estimation of sector-wide balance sheets because Call Report data generated by the Federal Reserve System for banks are consolidated at the headquarters office of a bank, even if it has many branches in multiple states. Thus, loans made to farmers in one State may be reported in another.

Many Types of Source Data for Aggregate Sector-based Balance Sheet Estimation do not exist at the State Level

The aggregate farm sector balance sheet is prepared using data from a variety of USDA and other sources for both assets and liabilities. Data used in constructing estimates of farm assets are taken primarily from National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), Economic Research Service (ERS), and other USDA sources. Data used to construct estimates of farm sector debt are acquired from both USDA and institutional sources. Many data sources used in constructing estimates of asset values and farm sector liabilities are available only at the national level.

Real Estate

This component is based on NASS value per acre of land and buildings and land in farms. Land value data are at the State level. However, land and building values are adjusted to remove the value of operator dwellings from the total. The share of total land and building values comprised of operator dwellings is not available on an annual basis at the State level.

Crop Inventories

The value of annual change in crop inventories is taken from the farm sector income accounts and exists at the State level.

Machinery and Equipment

The estimate of total value is derived from national level estimates of the values of machinery and equipment used to estimate capital consumption costs in the farm sector income accounts. The total is value of machinery and equipment is developed at the national level.

Financial Assets

The estimate is taken from the latest Agricultural Economics and Land Ownership Survey and is updated based on changes in financial assets in the U.S. economy. Annual data are not available on a State basis.

Investment in Cooperatives

National and State level data are obtained from institutional sources. ERS uses the most recent data available.

Purchased Inputs

Estimates of the value of purchased inputs of principal farm operators are derived from ARMS. These data exist for in ARMS only for 15 States.

Livestock Inventory

Estimates of the value per head and numbers of animals come from NASS and the farm sector income accounts. Data are available at the State level.

Farm Credit System Debt

These data are taken from Farm Credit Funding Corporation reports which are available at the national level.

Farm Service Agency Debt

Data are from Farm Service Agency Reports and are reported on a State level.

Commercial Bank Debt

Data are from Call Report data obtained from the Federal Reserve System. State-level data, however, are based on where the headquarters of a bank is located and not on where farmers or other borrowers exist that took loans.

Life Insurance Company Debt

Data are reported at the State level.

Individuals and Others Debt

Base data for the estimate come from Farm Finance Surveys. Data for annual updates are not available for all States.

CCC Storage and Drying Loans

Data are reported on a national level.

 

For more information, contact: Robert Williams or Ken Erickson

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: February 10, 2006