Farms.com Home   News

Farmers Received A Smaller Share Of Dairy Dollar.

USDA News        http://www.usda.gov

Over the past decade, the farm share for a basket of 14 dairy products—the ratio of grocery store prices (retail value) to prices received by dairy farmers (farm value)—has fluctuated between 24 and 38 percent.

In 2015, the annual retail value of the basket fell by 1.2 percent to $435 while the farm value of the same products fell by 26.6 percent to $124. A decrease in the all-milk price received by farmers was responsible for the basket’s lower farm value. In 2014, the all-milk price peaked at $23.98 per 100 pounds on a monthly-average basis.

The following year, however, the all-milk price fell to $17.08 per 100 pounds as a result of rising domestic milk production, falling U.S. cheese and dry whey exports, and growing imports of butter and cheese. The basket’s lower 2015 farm value, in turn, caused the farm share to fall from 38 to 29 percent that year.

Farmers received a smaller share of U.S. households’ dairy expenditures in 2015

Source:usda.gov


Trending Video

Feedlot owner predicts cattle market trends, details rebuilding challenges - Mike Briggs

Video: Feedlot owner predicts cattle market trends, details rebuilding challenges - Mike Briggs

In this episode of Market Journal, Mike Briggs of Briggs Feed Yard shares his expert predictions on the cattle market as we head into the end of 2024. From herd rebuilding delays to feed costs and seasonal price drops, Mike offers a comprehensive view of the challenges facing cattle producers.