Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Are we "out of " cattle?



Since the two years of drought liquidation, the beef cattle inventory has became so low that producers are pressed with the question of will we be able to rebuild the beef cow herd?  Two issues that will help determine the ability of the beef industry to rebuild is the loss of forage land to non-agricultural uses and the conversion of pasture to crop production. 


The drought is the major factor affecting the herd liquidation and until forage conditions improve rebuilding is moved to the back burner.  In 2011, 1.07 million head of beef cows decreased in Texas, Oklahoma, and the surrounding states.  Much of these same regions, like Arkansas, are still in a drought or at least feeling its effects.  Most of these losses in beef cows can be recovered, though some regions will take years.  The drought of 2012 has yet to be documented in terms of cow numbers, but experts estimate another 400 to 500 thousand head decrease in herd numbers. 

About 30 percent of the total U.S. land area is rangeland, pasture, or non-cultivated cropland, however; this includes some land used for recreational use.  From 1997 to 2007, land used for development increased nearly 17 million acres.  Land diversion away from agriculture is an important issue, but experts suggest this does not present a large barrier for the potential rebuilding of cow herds.  Only time will tell how well the beef industry will truly recover from these losses.  

Source: Derrell S. Peel
            Oklahoma State University Extension
            Livestock Marketing Specialist 

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Farmers Face "Death" taxes

What is it?
-          The “Death” tax is basically a hefty estate tax that will soon dramatically increase if congress fails to act.

___________________________________________________________________





______________________________________________________________________
Most all of the nation’s farmers and ranchers will be dealt a serious blow if death tax rates are allowed to pass.  Rates will be allowed to jump from a 35% tax on estates worth at least $5 million to 55% on estates valued at $1 million and up. 


Kevin Kester, a rancher, inherited a 22,000 acre ranch from his grandfather two decades ago, he paid the IRS $2 million.  If the death tax is allowed to skyrocket, Kester’s children could pay more than $13 million on that same 22,000 acre ranch. 

“ There is no way financially my kids can pay what the IRS is going to demand from them nine months after death and keep this ranch intact for their generation and future generations,” Kester said.
This tax will force the break-up of ranches and farms.  This does not only hurt the ones inheriting the land but future generations to come.  Farmers and ranchers are a dying breed and this death tax, if past, will catalyze the small population America has left.