Case IH Power Tab

Farm Futures
   Search Site:   Friday, May 25, 2012 | Bookmark This Site   
Skip Navigation Links
Home
Markets
News
Weather
Farm Futures NOW!
Magazine Online
RSS News
Land For Sale
Mobile
Subscribe
Reprints
Register
Login
About Us
Advertise
 
Share This
 

Custom Farming Rates Continue to Rise, UNL Analysis Shows

Expect to pay 15% more for tillage operations and 13.5% more for planting operations than in 2004.
Compiled by staff 
Published: Mar 16, 2006

Custom farming rates continue to rise as costs of fuel and farm machinery continue to go up, a University of Nebraska-Lincoln agricultural economist says.

Farmers who hire other people to do field work can expect to pay 15% more for tillage operations and 13.5% more for planting operations than in 2004, says Doug Jose, UNL farm management specialist who conducts the biennial survey of custom rates. The 2006 survey results will be published later this spring.

"These guidelines will help those doing custom work come up with some custom rates, while it will prepare farmers to expect to pay more," the Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources specialist says.

In 2004, the last time the survey was released, rates overall increased 10%. Then, as now, higher fuel costs were to blame. Power costs, which do not include the fuel, but the ownership and operating costs for the tractor, increased 8.8% in the last two years.

Fuel costs went up 46.2% in the last two years.

Other costs that went up during the last two years based on the Indexes of Prices Paid by Farmers published by the National Agricultural Statistics Service include: repairs, 8.1%; depreciation, 8.8%; overhead, which includes interest, insurance and housing, 14.4%; and labor, 10.1%.

To translate how these increases in the cost of machinery operations affect custom tillage and planting operations, Jose calculated the percentage of total costs represented by each of the cost categories. For example, for tillage operations, which include disking, chisel plowing and moldboard plowing, power costs represent an average of 33% of the total cost of tillage operations. He then combined these percentages with the cost increases from the NASS to calculate a weighted average increase.

To apply these percentages, multiply the rate charged in 2004 by these percentages to calculate an equivalent 2006 rate. For example, if the rate charged for a tillage operation in 2004 was $9 per acre, the equivalent rate for 2006, based on the cost increases, would be $9 x 1.15 or $10.35 per acre.

For more information about this analysis, visit the Update for Custom Rates Jose put together with a step-by-step approach on how to calculate custom costs.



Permalink: Click here

Tagged: tillage, custom rates, farm, insurance, farming

Comments
Read comments from others and share your own thoughts.
Please provide the answer to the following question:

 = 
 
Search this site:   

Read More Stories
USDA Seeks Comment on Report Timing
Read this storyWith new market hours,USDA is looking into the right time to release information to the market.
Read this story

Weekend Forecast Changes Pivotal for Grain Futures
Read this storyEurope remains a concern, but the big driver on Tuesday will likely be the state of next week’s anticipated Midwest rains.
Read this story

Farm Markets Rise Ahead of Holiday
Read this storyOvernight boost based on positive comments from Europe aimed at pressuring Germany.
Read this story

 
Morning Call by Bryce Knorr
Farm Markets Rise Ahead of Holiday
USDA Seeks Comment on Report Timing
Livestock Call By John Otte
Afternoon Recap by Arlan Suderman
Satellite Imagery Shows the Good and the Bad
CME Group Alters Hours…Again
The Buzz: Grain Market Chaos Continues
Farm Bill Heads for Senate Floor
Weekend Forecast Changes Pivotal for Grain Futures
Top 50 Tags
4-H afternoon recap American Farm Bureau Federation American Soybean Association animal health arlan suderman biodiesel biofuels bryce knorr BSE Bushel checkoff cotton Drought Environmental Protection Agency EPA ethanol Extension extension service farm farm bill Farm Bureau farm futures farm futures magazine farm futures market farm progress Farm Service Agency farmfutures farmfutures.com farming farmprogress.com fertilizer FFA free trade agreement Harvest insurance labor legal National Cattlemen's Beef Association National Corn Growers Association NCGA soybean soybean association soybeans SURE usda wheat winter wheat www.farmfutures www.farmfutures.com