U.S. Agricultural Trade as a Share of U.S. Production

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As the Doha Round of WTO trade negotiations drag on, questions have been raised about the importance of exports for U.S. farmers and ranchers. Efforts to boil down trade numbers to one dollar figure or percent of production have left much information unstated. This analysis relates exports to the value of farm production.

The starting point is the USDA supply and use estimates released by the World Agricultural Outlook Board (WAOB) on July 12, 2006 for the 2005/06 marketing years for crops and the 2006 calendar year for livestock and poultry. When other sources are used in this analysis, they are given.

The major farm program crops are the easiest to analyze because the WAOB provides the most complete information for corn, trigo, soybeans, gapas, bugas, lugas nga sorghum, barley ug oats. This analysis uses acres harvested, total use, export volumes and average farm prices. Total use for the marketing year is used rather than total production because it normally does not match with domestic and export use. The farm value of exports is calculated by multiplying export volume times the average farm price. Acres exported are calculated by multiplying the total acres harvested by exports as a percent of total use. The following table provides a summary.

These eight farm program crops have a total farm value of $54.36 billion for the 2005/06 marketing years and exports account for $19.41 bilyon, 35.7 percent of the total value. ang 82.1 million acres of production exported are 36.6 percent of the total acres harvested for the eight crops.

The farm value of exports for meat, eggs and dairy is harder to calculate. These are sometimes sold as products that may have greater value in an importing country than in the U.S. and increase the value of the live animal by a larger amount than the export weight would imply. To keep the process simple, this analysis will use the farm level value of commodities even though it likely understates somewhat the actual value of exports. The WAOB provides estimates for 2006 for production and exports for beef, pork, broilers, turkeys and eggs. A dairy production estimate is provided, but not exports, so the average of the last six years is used. The average farm prices for live hogs and cattle are used as estimated by the WAOB. Prices for the other commodities are taken from estimates by the Economic Research Service (ERS) and the National Agricultural Statistics Service of USDA.

The WAOB does not provide estimates of fruit and vegetable production and exports. Information from the ERS farm income estimates for 2006 and the ERS “Fruit and Vegetable Backgrounder” released in April of 2006 is used for this analysis. Farm sector cash receipts for fruits and vegetables for calendar year 2006 are estimated by ERS at $32.9 bilyon. The fruit and vegetable backgrounder reports that U.S. fruit and vegetable production has averaged 98.5 million tons per year for the past five years. The backgrounder also states, “In 2002-04 the United States shipped 9.4 percent of its total fruit and vegetable supply to other countries, compared with 8.8 percent in 1992-94.” Applying the 9.4 percent shipped to other countries to the $32.9 billion of cash receipts for fruits and vegetables gives a farm value of exports of $3.1 bilyon. Since many exports of fruits and vegetables are higher valued products, this analysis assumes that 12 percent of the cash value is a better estimate. That puts the farm value of exports for 2006 sa $3.9 bilyon.

Some consumer-oriented ready-to-eat items are exported and are not included in the categories listed above. According to data from the Foreign Agricultural Service of USDA these products totaled $8.12 billion in calendar year 2005. The assumption in this analysis is that exports for these items in 2006 will be about the same as 2005 and that the farm value of the products in the exported items is 20 percent of the total value, $1.6 bilyon.

The total farm value of agricultural exports is estimated at $31.1 billion per year. Total cash receipts for 2006 are estimated by USDA at $231.7 bilyon. The farm value of agricultural exports as estimated in this analysis is 13.4 percent of the cash receipts for U.S. p

Ross Korves
GISULAT NI

Ross Korves

Si Ross Korves nagserbisyo sa Kamatuoran bahin sa Pagnegosyo & Technology, sa wala pa kini nahimong Global Farmer Network, gikan sa 2004 – 2015 ingon ang Tigpamalit sa Patakaran sa Ekonomiya ug Pamatigayon.

Pagpanukiduki ug pag-analisar sa mga isyu sa ekonomiya nga hinungdanon sa mga prodyuser sa agrikultura, Naghatag si Ross og usa ka suod nga pagsabut kalabot sa interface sa pag-analisar sa palisiya sa ekonomiya ug sa proseso sa politika.

Gihangyo ni Mr.. Ang mga Korves nagsilbi sa American Farm Bureau Federation ingon usa ka Economist gikan sa 1980-2004. Nag-alagad siya isip Chief Economist sugod Abril 2001 hangtod sa Septyembre 2003 ug naghupot sa titulo sa Senior Economist gikan sa Septyembre 2003 pinaagi sa Agosto 2004.

Natawo ug nagdako sa usa ka southern Illinois hog farm ug edukado sa Southern Illinois University, Si Ross adunay usa ka Masters Degree sa Agribusiness Economics. Ang iyang pagtuon ug panukiduki nagpalapad sa tibuuk kalibutan pinaagi sa iyang buhat sa Alemanya isip usa ka 1984 McCloy Agricultural Fellow ug pagtuon sa pagbiyahe sa Japan sa 1982, Zambia ug Kenya sa 1985 ug Alemanya sa 1987.

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