Infrastructure
Investment...
Study reveals
impact of MS horse industry
By
Linda Breazeale
|
Mississippi's
Horse
Industry Facts - 1997
|
|
Horses
|
75,000
|
|
Owners
|
21,500
|
|
Arenas
|
321
|
|
Trucks
|
21,500
|
|
Trailers
|
21,500
|
|
Investment
|
|
Public
arenas
|
$70,000,000
|
|
Private
arenas
|
$6,500,000
|
|
Barns
|
$183,800,000
|
|
Trailers
|
$209,900,000
|
|
Vehicles
|
$376,200,000
|
|
Land
|
$112,500,000
|
|
Fencing
|
$26,900,000
|
|
Total
|
$985,800,000
|
|
MISSISSIPPI
STATE
-- The first phase of an economic impact study has revealed
almost a billion dollars are invested in the Mississippi
horse industry's infrastructure.
Agricultural
economists with the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry
Experiment Station completed the study of the industry's
investment in arenas, barns, towing vehicles, horse
trailers, fencing and land.
James
Hamill and Randy Little concluded that horse owners have an
invested value of almost $986 million in a state with about
75,000 horses. While that figure is above either Arkansas'
or Louisiana's horse numbers, it is considerably lower than
Tennessee's 190,000 or Alabama's 130,000 horses.
"Even
though Mississippi is home to the second largest American
Quarter Horse Association show in the world, very few people
know anything about our state's equine industry," Little
said.
The
National Agricultural Statistics Service discontinued its
inventory of horses in the 1950s when mechanization caused a
significant decrease in numbers. However, growth in the
horse industry in the last decade motivated the NASS to
publish population estimates in 1999.
Public,
private arenas ...
"One
thing we found was a tremendous increase in public arenas in
recent years. In 1995, the Mississippi legislature provided
$10 million in matching funds of up to $500,000 per entity
for livestock facilities. They appropriated an additional $5
million in 1997," Little said.
Little
said public funding for livestock facilities resulted from
needs created by youth activities and the adult activities
that followed. One major facility constructed in 1997 as a
result of state legislative support is the Mississippi Horse
Park, Agricenter and Fairgrounds located on MSU's South
Farm. General obligation bonds supported $3.5 million for
the facility's construction. An additional $2.5 million was
appropriated to the Mississippi Department of Agriculture
and Commerce to build an adjacent 5/8-mile track to support
the state's Standardbred horse industry.
A 1997
survey indicated that 72 public arenas are located in 64 of
Mississippi's 82 counties.
"Public
funding of these facilities has generated an expenditure of
more than $70 million since 1995," Little said. "No other
state has made such a commitment to public livestock
facilities."
The
same survey revealed 249 private arenas in 70 counties. The
total estimated value of all private arenas is $6.5
million.
Horse
Barns ...
Using
comparable percentages from studies conducted by the
American House Council and Texas researchers, the MSU
economists speculate that 21,500 Mississippians own 3.5
horses each and a total of 17,800 barns.
"If the
average value of a barn is $14,000, then the average
inventory value would be $3,787 per horse for stabling,"
Little said. "With the assumption that horse owners have an
average investment of $4,900 for a two-horse barn, the
average investment of $2,450 per horse was used to determine
the total investment in barns of almost $184 million to
house 75,000 horses."
Transportation
Issues ...
If
Mississippi horse owners are similar to Texans, 98 percent
have trailers and towing equipment.
"We
believe the average investment per trailer to be almost
$10,000 and the state's total figure to be almost $210
million," Little said. "With an average of about $17,500 per
towing vehicle, that would make the state's total investment
near $376 million."
Land,
Fencing ...
The
economists assumed one acre per horse and a minimum of
$1,500 per acre for a total land investment of almost $113
million. Fences can vary from very expensive to moderate,
but if horse owners used wooden fences around 3.5 acres, the
average farm would require $2,500 in fencing for a state
total of almost $27 million.
Total
Investment ...
"The
analysis of the state's horse industry reveals not only that
Mississippians love horses, but that there are significant
amounts of private and public investment in the industry,"
Little said. "The almost $1 billion investment illustrates
the substantial impact that the Mississippi equine sector
has on the state's economy."
-30-
Released:
June 23, 2003
Contact: Dr. Randall Little, (662) 325-2884
|