By
Suzanne Berry MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Modern technological advances have provided today's
farmers with many tools to enhance productivity and perhaps
their bottom line, but one tool that could be the most
important decision-making aid is a budget. "A
simple enterprise budget is the backbone of analysis for
many farm situations and is the foundation for estimating
expected income and expenses. Budgets are probably one of
the most important tools used by farm managers and producers
to evaluate alternative cropping scenarios," said David
Laughlin, agricultural economist at Mississippi State
University. "Some
producers can make simple budgets by doing the numbers in
their head. They might be able to do a reasonably good job
on cash income and expenses, but they often ignore things
like equipment usage costs and repairs, interest, labor or
land costs," Laughlin said. A
computerized budgeting process reduces the time necessary to
develop useful budgets and improves the accuracy of income
and cost estimates. MSU's
agricultural economists developed a free, user friendly,
computerized budgeting tool that can be downloaded from the
Internet. The Mississippi State Budget Generator v5.2 is a
menu-driven Windows version designed to estimate annual
costs and returns for a variety of individual crop
enterprises and whole-farm plans using consistent
calculation methods. A budget
allows people to explore alternative plans on paper to help
decide the best way to maximize profits. MSU's agricultural
economics department publishes hard-copy budgets for a
variety of crops yearly and distributes these to county
Extension agents, farmers, bankers, investors and others who
have requested one in the past. MSU software generates these
budgets. Using
this same software, producers can tailor a variety of
budgets to their particular operation. Different report
formats are useful for viewing information organized in
slightly different ways. Ten different budget report formats
are available for printing or viewing on-screen for each
commodity. Four report formats are available for whole farm
plans, and input listings and tables with calculations are
available for printing. The
information derived from a budget includes estimated income
and expenses for the farming operation. There are three
types of budgets containing slightly different information
which farm managers and other decision-makers may find
useful. The
whole-farm budget is a detailed summary of the major
physical and financial features of the entire farm business.
An enterprise budget is a subset of the whole-farm budget
that shows a particular set of production practices for a
specific crop or enterprise. The third type, called a
partial budget, can help producers analyze the effects of a
change from the original or existing plan. This particular
budget only considers revenue and expenses that will change
with a defined change in the plan. "Since
the 1995 Farm Bill was enacted, producers have become more
interested in making economically sound cropping decisions
because the government no longer sets the rules for
particular cropping patterns," Laughlin said. "Now cropping
decisions are completely left up to each
producer." Laughlin
said today's increasing costs and decreasing prices mean
that farmers should learn to develop and use a budget that
can help them become better decision-makers. Locate
the free software online at http://www.agecon.msstate.edu/laughlin/msbg.asp. Released:
Aug. 14, 2000
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Budget Software
Helps Farmers
Contact: Dr. David Laughlin, (662) 325-7987
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:35
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