By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Federal relief is on the way to small hog producers
who managed to survive the 1998 market
catastrophe. Mark
Crenshaw, swine specialist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said the assistance comes
too late for many of the state's smaller producers who opted
out of the business months ago. The U.S. Department of
Agriculture estimateed there are 100,000 eligible producers,
but Crenshaw said Mississippi may have 50 qualified
farms. "Eligible
farmers can receive $5 per slaughter-weight hog for up to
500 hogs. The maximum any farm will receive is $2,500,"
Crenshaw said. "Most recipients will be smaller, independent
farmers who rely on the money from hog production for
supplemental income, not their primary source." The
assistance is only available to producers who sold fewer
than 1,000 market hogs during the last six months of 1998.
Producers who market hogs under fixed-price or cost-plus
contracts and any operation whose gross income was greater
than $2.5 million will not be eligible for
payments. Crenshaw
said farmers can apply for the aid from Feb. 1 through 12 in
the local offices of USDA's Farm Service Agency. Potential
recipients should contact FSA offices for eligibility
information. "The
payments of $5 per head certainly won't make up for the
losses incurred in late 1998, but it will help," Crenshaw
said. "Some of the losses were as high as $50 to $60 per
hog." Mississippi
agricultural economists estimated the state's 1998 hog
industry to have a 24 percent decline in farm-gate value
from the previous year. The state's hog production was
valued at $45 million in 1998. Dr.
Charlie Forrest, Extension market specialist, said the
break-even price for marketing hogs is about 40 cents per
pound. "You
have to go back to the 1950s or '60s to find hog prices as
low as they were at some points in 1998," Forrest said.
"Prices for market hogs were as low as 8 or 10 cents a
pound, which means you could buy a hog ready for slaughter
for $20 to $25." Crenshaw
said producers were not simply "not making money," they were
paying for the opportunity to raise hogs. "About a
third of Mississippi's independent producers have recently
gone out of the hog business or are on the way out, and most
will not return," Crenshaw said. "Mississippi's percentage
of closures is slightly higher than the national trend
because of feed costs and lack of market
accessibility." While
prices in the first weeks of 1999 have improved as much as
20 cents per pound, Crenshaw cautioned producers from
feeling too much optimism. Released:
Jan. 25, 1999
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Hog Producers
Await Federal Assistance
Contact: Mark Crenshaw, (601) 325-3516
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:27:53
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