Total ag figures
hold steady despite troubles
By
Linda Breazeale
MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Bolstered by increases in poultry and row crops,
agricultural economists are predicting Mississippi's 2001
farm production value to remain near $4.8 billion, a
2.6-percent increase over the previous year.
Mississippi's
Top Crop Values
(Estimated in millions)
|
|
1.
Poultry
|
1,541
|
|
2.
Forestry
|
1,121
|
|
3.
Cotton
|
528
|
|
4.
Catfish
|
271
|
|
5.
Cattle/calves
|
225
|
|
6.
Soybeans
|
204
|
|
7.
Corn
|
104
|
|
8.
Hay
|
94
|
|
9.
Milk
|
80
|
|
10.
Horticultural crops
|
75
|
|
11.
Rice
|
69
|
|
12.
Hogs
|
65
|
|
13.
Wheat
|
26
|
|
14.
Sweet potatoes
|
20
|
|
15.
Grain sorghum
|
12
|
Poultry, Mississippi's No. 1 agricultural commodity since
1994, was one of the state's bright spots with a 12-percent
increase over 2000 values. Broilers, eggs and chickens are
estimated at $1.5 billion. Poultry exports experienced major
growth in 2001; this was the first year export tonnage
increases exceeded production growth increases. Exports are
expected to continue to rise in the new year.
Charlie
Forrest, agricultural economist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said oversupplies caused
prices to drop on most commodities, including cotton, hay,
rice, soybeans and forestry. Larger acreage enabled cotton,
Mississippi's third largest commodity, to post a 9-percent
increase in value, despite late-season rains and low
prices.
"A
record U.S. cotton crop and large foreign production
resulted in prices being the lowest they have been in almost
30 years, just below 30 cents per pound during harvest,"
Forrest said. "Prices for most row crops are near or below
breakeven levels."
Two of
Mississippi's larger agricultural industries -- forestry and
catfish -- are predicted to suffer value decreases near 10
percent.
Forestry's
harvested volume was about 12 percent lower, and prices were
down on saw timber and continued low on pulpwood. The year
was harder on the forest industry than it was on landowners,
who opted not to sell timber until prices
improve.
Terry
Hanson, MSU agricultural economist, said the catfish
industry suffered dramatically from oversupply, the economic
recession and competition from Vietnamese fish fillets
marketed as catfish. Economists predict catfish total value
near $271 million, a 9.4-percent decrease.
"Prices
averaged at least 10 cents per pound lower in 2001 and
finished the year at historic low prices, around 50 cents
per pound. No industry expansion is expected until the
national economy begins to recover," Hanson said.
One
commodity that excelled in 2001 was corn. Economists are
estimating an almost 42-percent increase over last year's
drought-stricken corn crop for a total farm value of almost
$104 million.
Extension
corn specialist Erick Larson said growers harvested record
yields averaging 130 bushels per acre on 400,000 acres. Last
year, growers averaged 100 bushels per acre on 410,000
acres.
"Corn
yields have been increasing faster than any of the other row
crops. In the past 20 years, Mississippi's state average
corn yield has more than doubled," Larson said. "This year,
most of the credit goes to the ideal weather, but in
general, it can be attributed to improvement in inputs,
management and the freedom to rotate crops more than in the
past."
Larson
said the 1996 Farm Bill allowed farmers to utilize crop
rotation more than in the past. Rotation not only improves
corn yields, but also other crops by 10 to 20
percent.
The
2001 farm value estimates include a 68-percent increase in
hay for a total of $94 million, compared to last year's
drought-stricken level of $56 million.
See
graphs:
-30-
Released:
Dec. 17, 2001
For more information, contact: Dr. Charlie Forrest, (662)
325-1786
|