Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Agricultural Economics Economic Outlook 2010 Craig Infanger October 2009.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Agricultural Economics Economic Outlook 2010 Craig Infanger October 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 Agricultural Economics Economic Outlook 2010 Craig Infanger October 2009

2 Agricultural Economics

3

4 One year after….

5 Agricultural Economics One year after….

6 Agricultural Economics One year after….

7 Agricultural Economics Bailout + Credit Programs + Stimulus = $10T!

8 Agricultural Economics Bailout + Credit Programs + Stimulus = $10T!

9 Agricultural Economics Bailout + Credit Programs + Stimulus = $10T! U.S. GDP $14.1 Trillion

10 Agricultural Economics Actual and Projected Federal Budget Surplus and Deficits, FY97-10 Source: CBO Billions $

11 Agricultural Economics Actual and Projected Federal Budget Surplus and Deficits, FY97-10 Source: CBO Billions $

12 Agricultural Economics Actual and Projected Federal Budget Deficits and Debt Held by Public, FY97-12 Source: CBO Billions $ Debt

13 Agricultural Economics Has massive intervention worked? I don’t think anyone fully understands yet how much damage was done to the U.S. economy by the events of September 2008. Daniel Henninger WSJ 9-10-09

14 Agricultural Economics Working our way past “crisis” mode

15 Agricultural Economics Focus shifts to local real estate markets and smaller banks 100

16 Agricultural Economics Worst recession since WWII Annualized percent change Quarterly U.S. Real Gross Domestic Product Growth Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

17 Agricultural Economics Worst recession since WWII Annualized percent change Quarterly U.S. Real Gross Domestic Product Growth Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

18 Agricultural Economics Worst recession since WWII Annualized percent change Quarterly U.S. Real Gross Domestic Product Growth Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

19 Agricultural Economics What kind of recovery can we expect? Annualized percent change Quarterly U.S. Real Gross Domestic Product Growth Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis V, U, or W?

20 Agricultural Economics What kind of recovery can we expect? Annualized percent change Quarterly U.S. Real Gross Domestic Product Growth Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis Square Root? 2% - 3%

21 Agricultural Economics What kind of recovery can we expect? Annualized percent change Quarterly U.S. Real Gross Domestic Product Growth Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis Bathtub?

22 Agricultural Economics Unemployment: Jobless Recovery Again? Change from previous month (Thousands) Job Change (Left Scale) Unemployment Rate (Right Scale) Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics Change in Payroll Employment and Unemployment Rate Percent Jan. = -1,239,000 Total Job Loss = >7m

23 Agricultural Economics Unemployment: Jobless Recovery Again? Change from previous month (Thousands) Job Change (Left Scale) Unemployment Rate (Right Scale) Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics Change in Payroll Employment and Unemployment Rate Percent 125,000

24 Agricultural Economics “Jobless recovery” is not good news for rural Kentucky Kentucky’s 85,000 farms are dependent on off-farm jobs. >35,000 principal operators worked 200+ days off the farm. Current KY unemployment rate = 11%. About 3,000 - 6,000 “commercial farms” which account for 74% of all agricultural gross receipts.

25 Agricultural Economics Percent change from a year ago Inflation disappears as an economic issue Core CPI CPI: All Items Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index CPI: All ItemsCore CPI

26 Agricultural Economics Two of the reasons inflation is low…

27 Agricultural Economics Two of the reasons inflation is low…

28 Agricultural Economics U.S. economic outlook for 2010 ►Slow growth for U.S. & KY. Recession may be “over” but we face jobless recovery. ►Financial system appears stabilized and housing prices have begun recovery. ►Face serious debt service issues that will be drag on economic growth as interest rates rise.

29 Agricultural Economics U.S. Agriculture in a Chaotic Economy

30 Agricultural Economics U.S. Net Farm Income Major decline as prices & exports drop but costs rise Source: ERS/USDA * *estimated ’00-’09 average: $63 B -38%

31 Agricultural Economics U.S. Agricultural Trade Situation as of Fall 2008… Billion $ Source: USDA, ERS; fiscal year ending 9/30; p = preliminary ?

32 Agricultural Economics U.S. Agricultural Trade 1999-2010 Billion $ Source: USDA, ERS; fiscal year ending 9/30; p = preliminary f = forecast ▪Lower grain prices & volumes = 2/3 of drop in exports ▪ Exports stabilize in ’10 as dollar weakens, global economy improves ▪Food imports return to record-high as economy recovers ▪Trade surplus only $15B

33 Agricultural Economics KY Cash Receipts and Net Income Record high in 2008; sharp drop for 2009 $1.37B $ billion $3.93B

34 Agricultural Economics Big 6 = 82% Cash Sales, ‘08

35 Agricultural Economics Lower farm income affects land prices Source: USDA, NASS

36 Agricultural Economics Lower farm income affects land prices Source: USDA, NASS Agent Survey 2008

37 Agricultural Economics Climb in land values stops (pauses?) Source: USDA, NASS

38 Agricultural Economics Farm Balance Sheet Strong Source: USDA, ERS

39 Agricultural Economics Impact of global recession on agriculture now clear – lower exports, prices & income. Global recovery holds promise for improved environment in 2010. KY agriculture will continue to feel the recession-like conditions into 2010.


Download ppt "Agricultural Economics Economic Outlook 2010 Craig Infanger October 2009."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google