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Lower agricultural commodity prices are contributing to a decline in netfarmincome in 2024. This, combined with higher input costs, fewer government payments, and rising interest rates, is leading to a drop in netfarmincome. In 2024, netfarmincome is predicted to follow a similar pattern of decline.
In 2022, landowners experienced record high farmincome, with netfarmincome reaching $183 billion. NetFarmIncome and Cash Farmer Income, Inflation Adjusted (billion dollars) Note: F = forecast. Livestock and Poultry: +17.9% percent in 2023 after accounting for inflation.
As with all programs, NSAC will continue to analyze the RPFSA’s CSP provisions, including a proposed one-time CSP subprogram focused on enrollment of up to 500,000 acres of native or improved pasture land used for livestock grazing in the Lower Mississippi River Valley to address water quality issues leading to hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico.
Despite the pressures created by lower netfarmincome, declining commodity markets, higher interest rates and increased input costs, land values have remained quite stable across the Midwest. There are more motivated land buyers in todays market than there are willing sellers, according to Farmers National Company.
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