Farm income said to hit $88B

USDA forecasts Trump aid payments will boost profits

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s revised forecast on farm income suggests farmers will have their most profitable year since 2014.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s revised forecast on farm income suggests farmers will have their most profitable year since 2014.

President Donald Trump's administration says farmers are doing better than previously thought, forecasting profits will rise almost 5% this year because of the president's trade aid and payments to farmers who were unable to plant their crops because of flooding.

The more favorable portrait of agricultural finances comes as the administration has faced increasing criticism from farmers over losses from the president's intensifying tariff war with China. Farmers openly challenged Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue earlier this month at an event in Minnesota.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Friday projected net farm income this year will reach $88 billion, up from $84 billion last year. That's a rosier financial picture for farmers than earlier estimates, which didn't anticipate the level of aid Trump would provide to compensate for lost sales to China, said Jeffrey Hopkins, the economist who supervised the forecast.

The last forecast, made in March, also didn't include the level of aid payments farmers received for being unable to plant because of floods, Hopkins said.

The revised forecast suggests farmers will have their most profitable year since 2014. But the projection is still 2.3% below average farm profits since 2000 and almost 36% below their net income in 2013 when adjusted for inflation.

Farmers will receive $19.5 billion in direct government aid this year, the most since 2005, according to the projections. That doesn't include an additional $10.5 billion in federally subsidized crop insurance payments forecast for the year.

Rural voters are a key constituency for President Donald Trump as he heads into the 2020 election, and even before the trade war with China the farm economy had been under stress. The administration announced $16 billion in trade aid for farmers this year after providing $12 billion last year. Congress also appropriated $3 billion in disaster assistance for farmers on top of payments they receive from existing farm subsidy programs for those who were unable to plant.

The data also include big upward revisions for net farm income for last year and this year based on a 2018 survey on farm production practices and finances. The survey showed farmers' expenses were considerably lower than previously estimated, Hopkins said.

The USDA had previously estimated last year's farm profits at $63.1 billion. The 2019 projection of $88 billion is up from a $69.4 billion forecast released in March.

Business on 08/31/2019

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