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Agriculture, Technology and the Economy
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
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Technology and Prosperity
When I was about 10 years
old, I picked a little cotton on Billy Joe Hopper's
farm about three miles up the road from my house
in North Georgia. My ambition was to pick 100
pounds in a day. At three cents a pound, I would
earn three whole dollars. As I recall, the adults,
who knew what they were doing, could pick 300
pounds or more in a day. They could make $10.
The money doesn't sound like much today, and I
guess it really wasn't much then, either, but
it sure gave me some good memories. The best is
the memory of total exhaustion, with my back hurting
so badly I could hardly stand up, as I rode home
at dusk on top of a load of cotton.
Billy Joe is retired now,
and he quit using human cotton pickers many years
ago. In fact, I think he got out of cotton altogether
and devoted his energies to raising chickens.
But when I moved to Texas a while back, I made
a new farmer friend. His name is J. B. Cooper.
J. B. produces more cotton in Texas than Billy
Joe ever did in Georgia. It is to J. B. that I
want to dedicate this publication.
J. B. is completing his
sixth year as a member of the Dallas Fed's board
of directors, including the past four years as
chairman of its Audit Committee. Before his service
on our Board, J.B. served for six years on our
Small Business and Agriculture Advisory Council.
He has been our principal source of firsthand
information on agricultural trends, developments
and conditions in the Eleventh Federal Reserve
District. His hands-on experience and his expertise
have been invaluable to us over many years. We
will miss him when he retires from our board this
year.
This publication was inspired
by J. B., who also made significant contributions
to it, including some of his original photography.
This publication highlights the profound technological
changes that have occurred in agriculture over
the past 50 years. As J. B. has often reminded
us, agriculture is alive and well.
We don't talk or hear as
much about farming and ranching as we used to
because its employment base has declined so much
over time. But that decline is a sign of its success
rather than its failure. Fewer and fewer people
are producing more and more because of astounding
gains in productivity. With just under 3 percent
of the total workforce, American farmers and ranchers
are feeding our country and much of the rest of
the world.
In 1994, the output of the
agricultural sector was equal to about 1.5 percent
of GDP. When all economic activities from the
farm to the consumer are counted, however, the
food and fiber system directly and indirectly
affects 17.1 percent of the total domestic economy,
according to USDA estimates. This figure encompasses
a wide range of activities—such as machinery
repair and fertilizer production, food processing
and manufacturing, transportation, wholesale and
retail distribution of food and apparel products,
and eating establishments.
The Dallas Fed has devoted
several years of research to understanding the
great economic changes caused by technological
innovation. Our goal is to remind our readers
that such change brings prosperity and that technology
is driving great productivity increases in our
economy. In few places have these changes been
more evident than in agriculture. From the Global
Positioning System to fiber optics to computer-driven
harvesters, U.S. farmers and ranchers use the
highest level of technology and are among the
most efficient producers in the world. For consumers,
this technology means higher quality food at a
lower cost. So, to J. B. and Billy Joe and all
their friends who help put affordable food on
our tables, we say thank you and look forward
to all the agricultural innovations of the future.
—Bob McTeer, President
and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas |
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Innovation in Agriculture
Since 1948, agricultural production
has doubled, while total input use, including labor, land
and machinery, declined slightly. Overall, agricultural productivity
increased 1.8 percent annually—roughly 80 percent—compared
with a 1.1 percent increase in total nonfarm productivity
and a 1.3 percent increase in manufacturing productivity growth.
Technological change is bringing about one of the most dynamic
periods in American agriculture. Between 1948 and 1996, agricultural
labor productivity increased more than eightfold. The number
of people fed by one farmer has jumped from 15 in 1950 to
128 in 1995, including 34 outside the United States.
In the first half of this century, rapid
improvements of machinery enabled fewer farmers to work more
land. Productivity gains were dramatic between 1930 and 1960.
But as America's rising productivity began to level off in
the 1970s, many feared the technological revolution in American
agriculture was coming to an end. Those fears proved unfounded.
Today, productivity increases center
on rising yield per acre and per animal. Farmers have improved
control over their farming operations, spending more on management
services and efficiency-producing inputs, such as chemicals
and irrigation, and less on traditional inputs, such as machinery.
Today's farmers produce higher valued products as a result
of technological improvements in agricultural production and
food processing systems, as well as better information on
changing consumer preferences.
Technological advances are most beneficial
to larger farms, driving changes in American farming structure.
Overall, the number of farms and farmers continues to decline,
while the average size of each farm is expanding. In 1950,
just over 12 percent of the labor force worked as farmers,
but by 1990, that figure had fallen to just under 3 percent.
Medium-sized farms are disappearing. Smaller farms are managed
by part-time operators who supplement their household income
with off-farm employment. In 1992, the Census Bureau estimated
that the average large farm, with sales over $100,000, was
just over 1,500 acres. Slightly less than 18 percent of all
farms are large, but they produce 83 percent of farm products.
Larger farms are able to adopt technology
more rapidly than are smaller farms, particularly new management
methods to gain efficiencies in production. While the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) estimates that over one-fourth
of all commercial operators use computerized bookkeeping,
almost 60 percent of operators from the largest farms use
computers. Other technologies-such as computer-aided chemical
application, growth hormones, online marketing services, drip
irrigation, and computerized feeding, milking and waste management
systems are used mainly by operators of large farms.
New technologies continue to emerge.
Today's stronger intellectual property rights for agricultural
innovations have spurred private-sector research, which has
increased to nearly $4 billion annually. The USDA estimates
that public support for agricultural research has remained
roughly constant at $2.5 billion annually (in real terms)
since 1979. About $1.5 billion of this support comes from
the federal government, and the rest comes from the states.
As growing world demand encourages U.S.
farmers to expand production, constraints on land, water and
energy will compel them to rely on science and technology
for increases in production and on entrepreneurial skills
to manage the technology. Technology is not an option. Advances
will allow greater production at lower prices, and producers
must adopt these technologies to remain competitive.
Today's technology gives farmers with
thousands of acres of land the same information and control
backyard gardeners have at their fingertips. Each plot of
land can receive ample water, seed and fertilizer to maximize
yield, without excess. Computers, satellites and microchips
are giving farmers better information and making machinery
smarter and more powerful to get the most from every input.
Technology is dramatically increasing the amount of land each
farmer can work effectively.
Today's tractors are easier to use and
can do more for the farmer. Tractors have better visibility,
including improved lighting systems for nighttime work and
sophisticated fingertip controls that allow farmers to adjust
quickly to changing field conditions. Farmers are making tractors
smarter by equipping them to utilize the Global Positioning
System (GPS). Originally developed by the military to navigate
U.S. submarines, the GPS uses 24 satellites orbiting 12,000
miles above the Earth's surface to calculate a tractor's exact
position in the field.
Using the GPS locational device and
sensors in the field, farmers can harvest, along with their
crops, detailed digital maps of their fields, plotting slope,
soil type, moisture, historical yield, and weed and insect
problems. Information is collected on portions of the field
as small as 18 inches. Farmers use these maps to program computers
attached to variable rate equipment that modifies the application
rate of all inputs such as tillage, seeds, fertilizer, herbicides
and irrigation water. Precise application reduces waste and
improves yield. Future innovations will extend the use of
the GPS. For example, a computer-driven harvester will use
the GPS, wheel sensors and a video camera to "see"
a crop line so it can harvest a field without a driver or
a remote operator.
Livestock producers are also using computers
to get better information about their operations. Computer
chips imbedded in the ear of an animal can be used to monitor
growth and production. A farmer with 5,000 dairy cows can
easily monitor milk production and health records, scanning
the chip as a cow enters the milking facility to automatically
weigh and deliver an individually formulated ration of feed.
Computers help producers monitor and
respond to weather variability on a day-to-day basis. Solar-powered
weather stations in the field can be hooked up to a farmer's
computer to relay information about current air and soil temperature,
precipitation, relative humidity, leaf wetness, soil moisture,
day length, wind speed and solar radiation.
The Internet is increasing communication
and business opportunities within the agricultural community,
which previously operated in the relative isolation of rural
areas. Farmers, agricultural researchers, cooperatives, suppliers
and buyers use the Internet to exchange ideas and information,
as well as to conduct business with each other. Machinery,
seed, chemicals and other types of agricultural products can
be purchased and sold online. People can search for jobs and
employees. Producers use the Internet to monitor prices quickly
and as often as they like. Farmers from around the world can
exchange ideas, post questions and get answers about specific
topics, ranging from marketing and investing to tips on "no-till"
farming.
Computers increase the amount of information
farmers can process, from details on day-to- day operations
to the latest research on new chemicals or biological breakthroughs.
The computer allows farmers to study alternate management
decisions.
What are the benefits of more irrigation?
Is it cost-effective to apply additional chemicals? When is
the best time to sell crops or buy inputs? With improved record-keeping,
more detailed cost analysis and more sophisticated marketing
strategies, farmers are making better decisions and earning
higher profits.
Increasing Management Choices
As more information and technological
choices become available, and as farm size increases, the
challenge for farmers to manage all facets of the business—from
financing to marketing to production—multiplies as well.
Management innovation is helping farmers deal with the many
choices and risks of farming—from production risks,
such as weather and insects, to market risks, such as volatile
production and prices, and financing risks, such as interest
rates and the availability of credit. New management systems
are becoming more valuable to farmers with passage of the
Federal Agricultural Improvement and Reform Act of 1996. The
act is bringing about a new era for agriculture by allowing
freedom in crop production, potentially creating a higher
level of economic risk in marketing.
Organizations such as the USDA, the
University Extension Service and cooperatives help farmers
manage risk by bringing broad expertise to support the development
of strategies best suited to a particular farm situation.
Since the late 1800s, USDA research and the Land Grant University
Extension Service have been equipping farmers and ranchers
with the tools to compete and survive in production agriculture.
Researchers help synthesize and analyze
the overwhelming mass of information available to farmers.
The extension service makes recommendations and teaches farmers
to use a broad range of production practices and modern risk
management tools, such as crop selection and fertilization
practices, use of cooperatives, irrigation scheduling, livestock
feeding programs, biological control of insects, futures markets,
and financial analysis and planning. Cooperatives are helping
farmers work together to increase efficiency and get better
prices for the products they buy and sell. The United States'
4,000-plus cooperatives transact nearly $100 billion of business
for farmers annually. Cooperatives help individual farmers
gain the benefits of vertical integration that typically are
available only to large corporations. Farmers can increase
market power by marketing their crops together in a seasonal
pooling effort.
Cooperatives provide processing services,
making it easier for individual farmers to add value to their
products. Cooperatives also provide transportation, storage,
grinding, locker plants, credit and financing. One of the
largest regional cooperatives, Farmland Industries, headquartered
in Kansas City, is owned by about a half-million U.S. farmers
and ranchers in 22 central states. The cooperative produces
its own fertilizer and energy and owns a majority share in
the fourth-largest livestock packer in the United States.
Private companies or individuals are
helping farmers by sharing the risk of farm production, giving
operators more stable income from year to year. Farm operators
contract with private companies to provide a commodity, such
as corn or hogs. Depending on how contracts are written, processors
can take price and weather risks and may also take some of
the financial risk by providing feeder pigs or cattle and
feed up front. Processors may also provide specific guidance
on feeding rates and production practices, or determine when
to harvest. More operators may choose to share investment
risk as reduced government intervention exposes them to market
forces. Currently, these types of management arrangements
are being used most in the production of poultry, hogs, fruits
and vegetables, markets in which producers have not been protected
from crop price swings through government programs.
Improving Mother Nature
The science of biotechnology is developing
specialized seeds and breeding stock to give farmers and ranchers
increased profits through improved control over their production.
For many years, producers have been using conventional propagation
and breeding to cultivate beneficial attributes. This process
can be very time consuming and expensive, particularly with
crops. While embryo transplants facilitate the breeding of
livestock, the matching of parents can be used only on observed
genes and can produce unexpected results. Genetic engineering
promises more precision, helping scientists examine the entire
spectrum of genes from all organisms for potential improvements
to crops and livestock.
Scientists are making great advancements
mapping crop DNA, hoping to develop higher value traits that
produce improved yield with fewer inputs. Today's crops are
becoming more drought-resistant. Fruits and vegetables are
being developed with improved immunity to killing frost. Cotton
is being engineered to remain unharmed by herbicides. Insect-resistant
crops will reduce the need for chemicals, which are costly
and can be harmful to the environment. The development of
genetic diversity will also reduce the spread of disease because
large tracts of relatively identical plants make fields more
vulnerable to catastrophic outbreaks.
Genes are being developed to protect
poultry and cattle from specific diseases. Dairy farmers are
boosting milk production by injecting cows with a synthetic
growth hormone that is equivalent to one that occurs naturally
in a cow's pituitary gland. A similar hormone in hogs has
been used to pack more muscle onto pigs. Goats have been genetically
altered to produce specific proteins in their milk that help
control bleeding in hemophiliacs or break down blood clots
during heart attacks.
Genetic technology is more complicated
in livestock than in crops, but scientists are pinpointing
markers to guide them to genes that will someday revolutionize
the meat industry. Scientists believe they will be able to
control growth rate, milk yield and quality, fat-to-lean ratios,
tenderness, disease resistance, heat and cold tolerance, and
dozens of other traits important to producers of beef, dairy
products, sheep, poultry and fish. Technicians hope to improve
species by transgenics—insertion of a desirable gene
or set of genes from one species of animal into another. Researchers
believe genetically altered pigs may eventually provide replacement
organs and blood for humans.
Controlling genetic traits could bring
great change to the marketing of agricultural products. Producers
will be able to use a sample of blood, tissue or hair to determine
the quality and value of an animal, facilitating both breeding
and sales. The pork industry is already using ultrasound equipment
to evaluate a carcass for the percentage of muscle and overall
quality. Producers who apply the technology are getting paid
an additional $4 to $12 per head based on the value of the
carcass. Ultrasound equipment is also helping researchers,
who previously had to slaughter animals and process the carcass
to get data on body composition.
Biotechnology will help producers meet
consumer demands, shifting the way we breed and manage commodities.
Tomorrow's eggs might have less cholesterol. Pigs could produce
low-fat spareribs. Specialty corn and soybeans will be bred
for the specific needs of the end processor. For example,
corn will be custom designed to be white for tacos, have a
high oil content, be high in protein for animal feed or be
high in starch for industrial use.
Working With the Environment
Farmers are obtaining higher yields
at lower cost by getting the most from their soil and water.
Less tillage, better chemicals and more efficient irrigation
are keeping plants and soil healthier, helping sustain high
crop yields into the future.
For 10,000 years, farmers controlled
weeds through fallow and tillage, which expose the soil to
wind and water erosion. Today, 26 percent of U.S. planted
acres use low-till methods that leave 15 percent to 30 percent
residue coverage after tilling, and 35 percent use conservation
tillage, which leaves at least 30 percent of the soil covered
by crop residue. Conservation tillage reduces soil erosion
by 65 percent to 95 percent compared with traditional methods.
Farmers save fuel, reduce chemical runoff and increase soil
nutrients and organic matter, which improves the soil's water-holding
capacity.
Better chemicals help farmers plant
a cover crop following harvest of the primary crop to protect
the land from wind and water, suppress weeds, and feed organic
matter and, in some cases, nitrogen to the soil. Use of cover
crops has increased partly because today's herbicides let
farmers kill the cover crop fully so it will not compete with
the primary crop.
Today's farmers know more about applying
chemicals and fighting pests. Farmers are careful to avoid
excess applications of fertilizer and pesticides, timing applications
for sensitivity to local conditions, such as rainstorms, and
for controlling runoff. A combination of methods is used to
combat pests, including natural enemies, pest-resistant crop
strains, crop rotations and pesticides. Computers predict
when bugs will lay eggs and the best time to spray.
Farmers are getting the most from every
drop of water. Surge flow irrigation reduces water loss in
gravity systems by alternating the flow of water between two
sets of pipes with a timed valve. Improved sprinkler systems
discharge the water at low pressure evenly across the field
to reduce evaporation. Drip irrigation uses surface or buried
lines and emitters to apply water to only the soil around
plant roots. Plastic strips—three to five feet in width—are
often used in conjunction with drip irrigation to help maintain
soil moisture, prevent weeds and allow the soil to retain
heat for speedy growth and production.
Lower Costs and Value-Added Processing
Technology is increasing processing
speed, reducing production costs and improving processing
in ways that add value and convenience to products.
Manufacturing facilities are operating
closer to full capacity and at lower unit costs, thanks to
better farm production methods and vertical integration. In
the past, food packaging and processing facilities were forced
to maintain excess plant capacity to accommodate the uncertainty
of the biological production process. Today, managers can
more accurately predict and control facility use because technology
is helping farmers control production levels. Vertical integration
is also helping reduce the risk of uneven input flows because
decision-making can be coordinated at two or more stages of
production. For example, hog-finishing capacity is better
matched with packing-plant kill capacity, as is turkey grower
space with processor dressing capacity.
Technology is providing increasingly
sophisticated processing techniques that add value to products
and increase marketing alternatives. Today's processors have
better access to information about their customers and are
better able to provide products that meet customers' needs.
Processing can produce better fibers, such as cotton that
will not bleed color and is wrinkle-resistant. Baby carrots
are bred specifically to be processed into bite-sized morsels.
Meat can be processed ready to heat and eat, stimulating consumption
and bringing greater profits. Consumers will pay more for
products that are marketed with specific attributes, such
as free-range chickens and fruits, vegetables and meats grown
chemical-free.
Agricultural products, considered beneficial
because they are a renewable resource, are being processed
for new industrial uses. Crops are being used to produce oils,
inks, glues, films, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, paints, currency,
dynamite and biodegradable plastics. Gasoline containing ethanol
and methanol made from corn is considered better for the environment
because it burns much cleaner than fossil fuels.
Expanding Markets
Quick, reliable transportation is enhancing
the value of farmers' rising productivity. In today's grocery,
food is just as likely to come from around the world as from
a farm in the next county. Higher quality products are produced
at lower cost when farmers specialize, growing the most appropriate
products for their particular soil and climate, and then ship
the goods to wider markets. Shipping goods has become cheaper
and easier thanks to changing technology in the industries
that transport, store and distribute agricultural products.
Today's trucks, barges and other vessels
can make the same number of trips at lower cost. Lighter and
more fuel efficient trucks have cut fuel consumption by more
than half in the past 20 years. Tugboat captains can push
barges over the most efficient route at the optimal speed
by using satellites and computers to analyze historical shipping
patterns, weather and currents. More powerful locomotives
are carrying as many as 120 cars, reducing the number of crews
needed.
Better scheduling and transfers increase
transportation speed and reduce spoilage. The transportation
industry has been transformed by the use of regularly scheduled
containerized shipping. Products such as grain can be put
in containers that are quickly and easily transferred from
truck to train, barge or ship. Shipments are monitored using
geosynchronous satellites, bar codes or a new rail car identifier
system that allows shippers to use radio waves to identify
contents from a crystal inside each car. Improved insulation
and air conditioners keep modern containers cool at a lower
cost and without a lot of maintenance. Better packaging techniques
and postharvest pest and disease control help maintain quality
and safety. Improved infrastructure is alleviating bottlenecks
at ports and at locks and dams along the Mississippi River.
Cheaper, more reliable transportation
has led to improvements in the food processing and packaging
industry because lower shipping costs make it feasible to
ship products to one large processing facility.
Improved shipping techniques and infrastructure
have also helped U.S. agriculture become an international
business. Agricultural exports grew from $8 billion in 1972
to $54 billion in 1995. Trade flows are increasing with the
help of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the North
American Free Trade Agreement and a series of bilateral trade
agreements that have resulted in much less protection against
U.S. products since 1985. Today, nearly one-fifth of total
U.S. crop output is exported. Forty percent or more of the
wheat, soybean, corn and cotton crops are sold in other countries,
and sales of value-added consumer products like meat, fruits,
vegetables, processed foods and beverages are growing rapidly.
| Acknowledgments
These individuals
contributed helpful comments:
Jerry Fruin, University of Minnesota
Noel Gollehon, Mitch Morehart and John Reilly,
U.S. Department of Agriculture
These Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas employees contributed valuable research
assistance:
Michelle Burchfiel
Sheila Dolmas
Written by: J. B. Cooper
and Fiona Sigalla
Fall 1996 |
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