Dairy farming

hile crop producers face serious economic losses from reduced or  non-existent yields, the lack of corn, soybean and hay crops could make  the fallout even worse for milk, beef, pork, mutton, chicken, egg,  turkey and duck producers.
"The first thought is crop producers will bear the brunt of the  financial losses, but losses in animal industries will be enormous over  the next year - perhaps considerably greater than for the crop sector,"  Chris Hurt said.
Unlike many crop farmers, livestock producers don't typically have any form of income protection comparable to crop insurance.
December 2012 corn futures already have risen by nearly 55 per cent, and soybean meal futures are up 24 per cent.
"These higher feed prices have to be absorbed by the animal industry,  causing a collapse in financial margins," Chris Hurt said. "Higher feed  costs cannot be passed on to the consumer in the short run, so animal  industries have to take these losses or begin to liquidate animals."
The lack of profitability is likely to cause some livestock producers to  begin liquidation immediately, with Chris Hurt predicting even more  liquidation in the fall.
Increased slaughter in summer and fall will lead to a larger supply of  animals, especially beef cattle, on the market. That's likely to push  some livestock prices modestly lower, further narrowing any remaining  profit margins.  As that supply dwindles in the long run, meat, egg and dairy product  prices will increase and consumers will see higher prices at both the  grocery store and restaurants.
"Animal producers ultimately do get compensation for the higher feed  costs, but that comes after a prolonged period of losses that some  producers can't survive," Chris Hurt said.
"Unfortunately, the profit prospects for many in the animal industries  will not improve markedly until feed and forage prices can move lower  with more normal crops in 2013. That means their outlook appears bleak  for another 12-15 months. That is a situation where more rapid and  deeper liquidation can occur."
One immediate response from livestock producers has been to seek out and  cull low-productivity breeding animals, or to sell animals at lower  weights.
According to Hurt, the average live-hog weight has dropped from 278  pounds to 273 pounds because the drought has already caused increases in  feed prices. He expects further reductions in coming weeks.
Hurt said it's important for livestock producers to help make clear to  consumers and policymakers the sort of extreme financial stresses they  will face in the coming months.
"This articulation by the animal industries is important to alert  consumers to higher retail food prices, but also to policymakers," Chris  Hurt said. "Policymakers will likely have an influence on release of  Conservation Reserve Program lands for grazing and haying, on any  potential disaster payments from the federal government, and in helping  the Environmental Protection Agency and US Department of Agriculture  make decisions about the size for the 2013 Renewable Fuels Standard."






















