CHICAGO—U.S. farm incomes will hit their lowest point this year since 2009, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said Tuesday, deepening pain in the Farm Belt amid a multiyear downdraft in commodity prices.
The forecast reflects a painful slump in the U.S. agricultural economy driven by bumper corn and soybean harvests, swelling grain inventories and tougher export competition. Farmers are expecting record corn and soybean harvests again this fall, potentially pushing prices for the nation’s two most common crops down even further.
As a result, the USDA said, net farm income will drop 11.5% to $ 71.5 billion this year, from $ 80.7 billion in 2015. That would be the third straight annual pay cut for farmers since incomes soared to record levels in 2013.
Clement weather this summer has fueled expectations that U.S. farmers will harvest the largest U.S. corn and soybean crops in history, with the USDA earlier this month projecting that the nation’s corn crop will reach about 15.2 billion bushels, and the soybean crop about 4.1 billion bushels.
Still, Tuesday’s forecast was an improvement from the USDA’s February estimate for net farm income of $ 54.8 billion this year, due mainly to signs that growers are cutting expenses—particularly on farm equipment—to ride out the multiyear slump. The USDA on Tuesday estimated farmers would spend $ 27.7 billion less this year than predicted in February.
Earlier this month, tractor supplier Deere & Co. said it would curb output of its hallmark green tractors and combines as lower crop prices chip away at farmers’ appetite for new machinery.
The USDA estimated production expenses for farmers would decline $ 10.1 billion, or 2.8%, thanks to reduced spending on livestock and poultry-related purchases as well as on fertilizer and fuel. The declines mark the second straight year of lower farm expenses after spending peaked in 2014, and the second-biggest year-over-year reduction since 2009.
The agency also said government payments to farmers would increase nearly 25% this year to $ 13.5 billion, due in large part to insurance-like programs that pay growers when prices or revenues fall steeply.
Write to Jesse Newman at jesse.newman@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires 08-30-161255ET Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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