U.S. farm inputs have shifted in past 70 years | Western Livestock Journal
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U.S. farm inputs have shifted in past 70 years

USDA Economic Research Service
Feb. 17, 2023 1 minute read
U.S. farm inputs have shifted in past 70 years

U.S. farm output—the total amount of livestock, crops and other farm-related outputs produced in a year—tripled in the seven decades from 1948 to 2019. At the same time, the total amount of inputs used in U.S. farm production only increased slightly by 4%, at an annual rate of 0.06%, partly because of a shift away from labor and land and toward non-land capital and other intermediate inputs.

From 1948 to 2019, the amount of farm labor used in the production of U.S. agricultural commodities fell 74%, and land use declined 28%. On the other hand, the use of intermediate inputs such as fertilizer, pesticides and purchased services grew 126%, and the use of capital inputs such as machinery and farm structures (chicken houses and greenhouses, for example) grew 79%.

Over the years, technological changes have made inputs such as machinery and agricultural chemicals more affordable for farmers and have partially replaced labor and land inputs in the production process. As a result, increased productivity has been the primary source of growth in U.S. agricultural output. Over 70 years, farm output grew at an average annual rate of 1.42%, and productivity contributed 1.36 percentage points to that growth rate. USDA Economic Research Service

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