107.5FM WCCN The Rock - The Coolest Station in the Nation
ESPN 92.3FM WOSQ
92.7FM WPKG
Memories 1370AM 98.5FM
98.7FM / 1450AM WDLB - Timeless Classics
Listen Live: 107.5 THE ROCK92.7 FM
Family owned radio stations serving all of Central Wisconsin

Wisconsin Farmers Can Expect to Pay Record High Amounts to Plant Crops this Spring

Thursday, February 9th, 2023 -- 10:01 AM

wisconsin-g6d874d919_6402.jpg

(By Hope Kirwan, Wisconsin Public Radio) As the calendar ticks down to spring, Wisconsin farmers can expect to pay a record high amount to put their crops in the ground this year.

According to Hope Kirwan with Wisconsin Public Radio, ag economist Paul Mitchell said at the Wisconsin Agricultural Outlook Forum in January that the cost of production in Wisconsin and surrounding states is forecast to set a new record this year, after several years of increases.

Mitchell, who leads the Renk Agribusiness Institute, said a University of Wisconsin-Extension budget tool shows it will cost $1,017 per acre to plant corn for grain, while silage is estimated to cost $1,134 per acre. Soybeans are projected to cost $696 per acre to produce.

While the actual cost to plant looks different for every farm, Mitchell said during his presentation that average costs are 10 to 20 percent higher this year than in 2022. He said that boils down to much thinner profit margins, even if crop prices remain at the higher levels seen last year.

"Will commodity prices stay high enough to justify these costs? That's going to be the big question," Mitchell said at the forum. "We've got margins out there, we can make money ... will these make sense? Can I continue to make money at these high prices?"

He said there is some evidence that fertilizer and energy costs are declining, two items that took a toll on farmers' profits last year. Purdue University in Indiana surveys farmers monthly about their finances in its Ag Economy Barometer.

In the latest survey from January, 22 percent of respondents said they expect to have a larger operating loan this year compared to 2022. Eighty percent of those respondents said the larger loan was due to increased input costs, while only 5 percent reported it was due to carrying over unpaid debt.


Feel free to contact us with questions and/or comments.