Ed McNamara sat in the driver's seat of his John Deere combine recently, musing about crop prices as he mowed through six rows of corn at a time.
Thousands of Minnesota farmers have withstood stubbornly low crop prices during the past 27 months, and farmers' average net income has been dropping steadily for the past three years. McNamara, who has been farming just south of the Twin Cities near Goodhue since 1978, has seen the farm economy cycle up and down several times and knows the drill when profit margins are slim to none.
"Tighten your belt, cut back on inputs but don't hurt your yield, run machinery a little bit longer, and try to get the best deal for supplies," he said, including seed, fertilizer and other chemicals.
As farmers cut back, the doldrums caused by lackluster prices for crops and livestock have started to ripple onto the main streets of rural Minnesota. When farmers have less money to spend, it affects anyone who is selling farm equipment, marketing fertilizer, or building new barns, bins and sheds.
Low commodity prices also put a squeeze on cash rents for land that many retired farmers or their families depend on for income.
Successful farmers were adjusting their budgets even before corn prices dropped below $4 per bushel in mid-2014, considered to be near the break-even point for many producers.
Record yields should help
Many hope to salvage marginal profits in 2016 thanks to generally good weather and record or near-record yields forecast for the second consecutive year.
But David Preisler, executive director of the Minnesota Pork Producers Association, said the direct effects of weak crop and livestock prices show up quickly in many small towns.