Ag outlook: sales up but so is the cost of farming.

There was good news and bad news at the 6th annual South Carolina Ag Outlook Conference. The good news: sale prices for commodities are trending up; unfortunately, so are the costs associated with producing them.

Walt Morgan, crop insurance agent for Mishoe Insurance Agency in the Pee Dee area, said the conference is a way to help farmers mitigate risks.

"The prices being up will definitely help, so I'd say that's the main positive," Morgan said in a news release. The rising cost of things such as fuel and fertilizer was the primary negative.

"This is going to be a year that each farmer is going to be completely different," he said, "so by having this information and being able to talk to them and make sure they are staying (on top of) their own budgets is going to be key for the upcoming year."

The conference was held at Clemson University's Sandhill Research and Education Center in Columbia, home base of the Clemson Extension Agribusiness Team.

"We need to make sure our farmers are equipped with the best information possible to make sure they stay on the farm," Clemson Extension Director Tom Dobbins said in the release. "We can talk about sustainability all we want, but sustainability to me is profitability. If they're not making a profit, they're not going to be on the farm very long."

Kansas State University professor Brian Briggeman, a conference speaker, pointed to the economic shutdown that accompanied the COVID-19 pandemic, which led to an historic drop of 31.2% in the country's real gross domestic product.

Briggeman said recovery from that drop was initially strong but has now become "uneven," according to the release. Labor force participation is low, but strong job growth points to a solid rebound in the 2022 labor market.

And while the country's total public debt levels have soared, interest payments have remained manageable.

Still, according to Briggeman, numerous questions remain for 2022, including how long inflation might persist.

"We had trillions of dollars of fiscal stimulus come into the economy in 2020 and even 2021, and that supported strong...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT