美国农业损失持续,尽管有联邦援助。
Significant US farm losses persist, despite federal assistance

原始链接: https://www.fb.org/market-intel/significant-farm-losses-persist-despite-federal-assistance

## 美国农业经济:持续的挑战与损失 最近的美国农业部报告预测,到2026年,九种主要行作物的生产成本将继续上升,延续自2021年开始的趋势。 膨胀的运营费用——包括肥料、燃料、劳动力和利息——是主要驱动因素,预计短期内不会得到缓解。 2025年每英亩的成本从396美元(小麦)到1308美元(水稻)不等,预计2026年将增加2.2%-3.3%。 尽管有FBA和ECAP等援助计划,但预计许多农民将连续第四年或第五年亏损。 这些计划只能部分弥补成本上升和商品价格停滞之间的差距,过去三年估计的行业损失超过500亿美元。 特种作物种植者面临类似的压力,但数据限制使得准确的损失估算变得困难。 虽然援助提供了一些缓解,但它不能完全恢复盈利能力,从而给农场财务和信贷获取带来压力。 像OBBBA中提出的长期解决方案,要到2026年才会生效,这使得许多生产者在不久的将来面临关于种植和投入使用的艰难决定。

尽管有联邦援助,美国农场仍然持续遭受重大损失,引发了 Hacker News 的讨论。一个关键点是,农业不仅仅是关于利润;粮食安全是国家战略利益。美国的农业部门与玉米油和乙醇等产品的加工以及复杂的出口关系紧密相连,货物经常被*卖回*美国。 用户质疑大量农业补贴背后的经济逻辑,想知道为什么它们会导致有效的资源配置,而不是依靠私人保险来管理固有的不可预测性。人们也担心援助是否真的能帮助小农户,或者只是进一步促使大型公司整合土地,并且有评论指出,鉴于当前的农业困境,农村社区可能会重新评估政治立场。
相关文章

原文

Faith Parum, Ph.D.

Economist


Key Takeaways

  1. Per-acre production costs for all nine principal row crops are projected to rise again in 2026, continuing a troubling trend that began after 2021.
  2. Inflated operating costs remain the primary drivers of higher breakeven prices, with limited relief expected in the near term.
  3. Recent programs have offset a portion of losses, but do not fully close the gap between costs and market returns, leaving many farmers potentially operating below breakeven for another year.
  4. Specialty crop growers face similar issues as row crop farmers,but limited data makes per-acre loss estimates challenging.

The USDA-Economic Research Service (ERS) December update to Commodity Costs and Returns provides a comprehensive look at per-acre production costs for the nine principal row crops: corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton, rice, barley, oats, peanuts and sorghum. At a high level, ERS projects average total costs per acre to increase for every crop in 2026, underscoring the persistence of elevated production expenses across U.S. agriculture.

When operating expenses and farm-wide costs like equipment, land and management are combined, costs vary widely by crop. In 2025, forecasted total per-acre costs are $1,308 for rice, $1,166 for peanuts, $943 for cotton, $890 for corn, $658 for soybeans, $498 for oats, $491 for barley, $443 for sorghum, and $396 for wheat. Looking ahead, ERS projections for 2026 suggest continued upward pressure across most cost categories, with total cost increasing anywhere from 2.2% to 3.3%. Amongst the nine principal crops, wheat ($409 per acre), sorghum ($458) and oats ($513) remain at the lower end of the production cost spectrum, while soybeans ($678) and barley ($507) fall in the mid-range in 2026. Cotton ($965), peanuts ($1,194) and rice ($1,336) remain the most expensive crops to produce on a per-acre basis.

Operating costs—expenses directly tied to producing a yearly crop, such as seed, fertilizer, chemicals, fuel and labor—substantially vary across crops. In 2025, total operating costs ranged from $155 per acre for wheat to more than $764 per acre for rice and $631 per acre for peanuts. In 2026, these costs are expected to rise, ranging from $774 per acre for rice and $160 per acre for wheat. While select inputs have moderated slightly from recent peaks, overall operating expenses remain well above pre-2021 levels. Rising costs since 2020 have been driven primarily by sharp increases in interest expenses (+71%), fertilizer (+37%), fuel and oil (+32%), labor (+47%), chemicals (+25%) and maintenance (+27%), alongside notable gains in seed (+18%) and marketing costs (+18%).

Losses Persist Even After FBA and ECAP

Against this backdrop of elevated costs, commodity prices have remained under pressure, limiting farmers’ ability to cover their costs through the marketplace alone. As a result, many farms are projected to experience losses for a fourth or fifth consecutive year, even after accounting for crop insurance indemnities and ad hoc assistance.

The Farmer Bridge Assistance (FBA) Program and the Emergency Commodity Assistance Program (ECAP) provide important near-term support. However, ECAP was designed to address 2023 and 2024 losses, rather than 2025 and later production challenges. For both programs, payments are calculated on a per-acre basis. However, when compared to current per-acre production costs and weak commodity prices, these payments generally cover only a share of losses rather than restore profitability. In fact, returns over total costs for all nine principal row crops are projected to remain negative on a per-acre basis even after accounting for federal assistance. Based on loss calculations used in the Farmer Bridge Assistance Program, rice producers face losses of roughly $210 per acre, followed by cotton ($202), oats ($159), peanuts ($131), sorghum ($91), corn ($87), wheat ($70), soybeans ($61) and barley ($42). In total, net losses across the sector are estimated to exceed $50 billion over the past three crop years.

For many farms, aid helps slow the erosion of working capital but does not fully offset negative margins. As a result, producers continue to absorb multiyear losses that strain balance sheets, tighten cash flow and complicate access to operating credit. These loss estimates reflect national averages; actual costs of production and returns vary by region, management decisions and ownership structure. For example, producers who own their farmland may face lower total costs by avoiding cash rental expenses, resulting in higher returns.

Specialty Crops

Additionally, neither the FBA program nor the ECAP address losses in the specialty crops market. The 2024 Marketing Assistance for Specialty Crop Program (MASC) provided a first but limited relief step for growers and, for many, represented some of the first federal assistance tied to market challenges in the sector. Specialty crop growers continue to face deep and persistent economic losses driven by rising input costs, tightening margins, weather and disease disruptions, labor expenses and constraints, and global trade instability — challenges shared by field crop agriculture, including producers of crops beyond the nine principal crops, such as alfalfa and sugar beets. Strengthening support for all sectors of agriculture is an economic necessity. Doing so will help maintain a resilient, accessible and diverse U.S. food system.

Conclusion

ERS cost projections make clear that input costs for all of the nine principal row crops remain elevated and sticky. Continued increases in both operating and overhead expenses are pushing breakeven prices higher, while commodity prices remain insufficient to offset those costs for many producers.

While FBA and ECAP payments are an important and welcome step in addressing near-term financial stress, they do not fully close the gap between costs and returns. As farmers enter the 2026/27 marketing year, accumulated losses — estimated to exceed $50 billion across the sector over the past three crop years — continue to weigh on farm finances.

These estimates reflect national average conditions and are calculated ahead of the growing season, before producers make final planting, input and marketing decisions. In practice, farmers respond to market signals by adjusting crop mix, input use and risk management strategies as conditions evolve. While outcomes vary widely by region and operation, persistently elevated breakeven prices underscore the importance of market-driven solutions that strengthen domestic demand — such as year-round access to E15 — to help support commodity prices and improve farm margins.

Much-needed safety net enhancements through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) are expected to take effect in October 2026, but those changes do not address the pressures farmers face today. In a recent letter to Congress organized by the American Farm Bureau Federation and signed by 56 agricultural organizations, farm groups warned of an economic crisis in rural America, citing multiyear losses driven by record-high input costs and historically low commodity prices. Congressional leaders from both parties have acknowledged the severity of these losses and the need for additional aid to stabilize farm finances. Until longer-term policy improvements take hold, many operations remain caught between high operating costs and low commodity prices, underscoring the ongoing financial strain facing U.S. agriculture as producers weigh whether they can afford to plant another crop.

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