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Measurement of Farm Incomes

Measurement of Farm Incomes. Economics of Food Markets Lecture 4 Alan Matthews. Outline. What are concerns about farm income? The resources/returns square Measuring farm incomes Macroeconomic sources Microeconomic (survey) sources Assessing farm incomes in Ireland

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Measurement of Farm Incomes

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  1. Measurement of Farm Incomes Economics of Food Markets Lecture 4 Alan Matthews

  2. Outline • What are concerns about farm income? • The resources/returns square • Measuring farm incomes • Macroeconomic sources • Microeconomic (survey) sources • Assessing farm incomes in Ireland • Farm household living standards • Are farmers poor? • What about returns to farming? • Distribution of support to farming

  3. Farm income concerns • Income adequacy – are farmers poor? • Income parity – do farmers earn less than the going rate on the resources they employ? • Income stability – are farm incomes particularly volatile?

  4. Measuring farm income • Dimensions of the farm income problem • poverty (income adequacy), instability (income stability), comparability (income parity) • conceptualising farm problems using the farm welfare/resource returns square • Aggregate income derived from the agricultural accounts calculated on a ‘national farm’ basis (CSO Economic Accounts for Agriculture) • Different income concepts are used • net value added, income from self-employment in agriculture, net farm income • Dividing aggregate farm income by the numbers engaged to obtain a measure of the health of the farming sector

  5. Sources of data on farm incomes • Macroeconomic • Economic accounts for agriculture • Combine with data on sources of labour input (LFS vs AWU) • Limited to averages/useful for showing trends over time • Microeconomic • National farm surveys (Teagasc) • Household budget surveys (CSO) • Good for showing differentiation within the sector/may not be fully representative

  6. Eurostat Income Indicators Operating surplus

  7. Limitations of the macroeconomic measure • imprecision over numbers at work in the industry (Labour Force Survey vs. Farm Structures Survey sources) • not all farmers are solely dependent on farming for their livelihood. A high proportion of farm household income now comes from off-farm sources (Household Budget Survey source) • ignoring wealth and capital gains effects gives a misleading impression of economic status • farming is not a homogeneous industry. Contains a wide range of farm sizes and types (Teagasc National Farm Survey). Incomes in cattle farming in Ireland are particularly low.

  8. Microeconomic (survey) data on farm incomes • Drawn from the Teagasc National Farm Survey • Allows us to measure the heterogeneity of incomes within farming, by farm size or farm system or region • Deals only with income from farming • Drawn from the Household Budget Survey • Allows us to measure the total household income of farm families • Note distinction between the ‘narrow’ and ‘broad’ definitions of a farm household

  9. Comparing farm and nonfarm incomes • crude approach based on calculation of a disparity index - ratio of average agricultural incomes to average earnings in rest of economy • Average farm income vs. average industrial earnings • Income from farming vs. total household income?

  10. Percentage of farm household income from all sources, per cent Source: Matthews 2004, in O’Hagan and Newman

  11. Comparison urban-rural household incomes, 1999/2000

  12. Absolute levels of farmer incomes - measuring the extent of poverty • Two issues • what is the relative importance of poverty (risk, incidence and severity) among farmers as compared to other social groups • identifying the characteristics of farm households in poverty • Defining the poverty line • whether to look only at financial income or other indicators of deprivation • absolute vs. relative measures • the unit of analysis - individuals vs. households • The Irish data (ESRI surveys) show considerable farm poverty, mainly older farmers on smaller holdings in west of country

  13. Risk of poverty (relative income measure) Source: ESRI Living in Ireland Survey

  14. Risk of poverty (consistent poverty measure) Source: ESRI Living in Ireland Survey

  15. Are farmers underpaid? • Idea is to compare returns to farm labour or capital with returns elsewhere in the economy • Total return to farming is a return to farmer’s own labour, own labour plus management input • Applying standard rates of return more than exhausts the available factor income • Conclusion is that, even if farmers may not be poor, their resources are not being used very productively.

  16. The distribution of government support – how well targeted? • Support to farmers provided both directly and through market price support – easiest to measure distributional effects of direct payments • DPs in EU often said to follow an 80/20 rule • DPs in Ireland also go mainly to the better off farmers, but this conclusion can vary by scheme.

  17. Measuring and assessing farm incomes- summary • Farm problem concerns emerge from the direction and pace of the economic adjustment required of the sector • widening differentiation in the farm sector (greater polarisation of farm size, greater access to off-farm income sources) makes drawing inferences from ‘average’ farm incomes increasingly anachronistic • different measures of farm income are available and can be useful depending on the purpose in hand • assessing the adequacy of farm incomes complicated by the huge degree of existing government support • serious problems of farm (and rural) poverty persist

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