I started farming in 82 , things looked pretty good. Then European subsidies caused grain prices to tank .my parents who I was in partnership with got killed in a car accident. I started changing over to cattle and just managed to build a herd when bse hit . Just when cattle and grain started to recover , two years back to back total drought. Then after that I had a big divorce settlement . Followed by the winter of 2012 , we got a foot of snow on Oct 6 and it never melted till May , but ran out of feed in feb. Just never seemed to get out from under the rock
Been there, done that. Saved my land base, but have found it's easier to farm for someone else and get paid every week. I also get to play with new toys without paying for them.. Life is good now.
@@andrewmellon5072 I didn't loose the land , but my machinery was wore out and the idea of trying to rebuild my cattle herd at 50 and nobody to take over , I didn't want to go deep into dept , just in time to retire
I hope you have a long and enjoyable retirement. I live in Ireland, my only son is a nurse, living in Australia married to an Australian so I know about passing on farms. I am retired 70 yers old. I rent out land and just keep 16 ewes which I am lambing now out side. I am glad it worked out.
Foreign countries and weather can’t be controlled but 19% interest only helps the wealthy people. Our own politicians are to blame for the farming crisis of the 1980s. Most of the large scale farms around that are thriving now are the lucky few that had debt forgiven.
Lending in the 70’s was done on demand notes with floating interest. A fixed interest on a bank note was unheard of. As inflation got out of hand under Jimmy Carter, the floating interest rates on those demand notes went as high as 22%. Most farmers couldn’t even pay the interest on their bank notes, much less the principal
I started farming in 1979, was very careful with every dollar i made, and invested back into my grain/hog farm. All used equipment, didn't borrow more than i could figure out how to pay back at any point. Never inherited anything, now own 1,000 acres in northern Illinois. So it could be done inspite of all the obstacles, and i faced all the same ones the rest did.
Good day from Ontario, Good for u yes interest in 1980 hit over 20%, divide that into 72 3-4 yrs it doubles. New machinery with costs never made money. A new pkup almost 80-90 thousand. Ths
The value of Farm Land was purposefully inflated. They lured landowners to take out loans based on the artificially inflated land prices, and then called in the notes when land values plummetted. A simple land grab.
My grandpa said it was all do to irresponsible borrowing on the farmers and irresponsible lending. Add in dry conditions and he watched a lot of his neighbors fail. I was super young so all I have were his stories and inherited land from his estate. Most his neighbors who had to have new shiny equipment lost it all in the end. That's all I know.
I was a young boy in that era. To this day the old man has always reminded me do not forget the 1980’s (he’s a good teacher). The farm couldn’t carry itself because of high interest rates taking away profit on rented or crop share land. In addition I remember 1988 and dad harvesting 6 bpa soybeans. Like others mentioned it was a perfect storm of variables contributing to the demise. I’ve farmed over 2 decades myself and I still think of the 80’s often. Sadly I can see this narrative could repeat itself.
I harvested 3 bpa deans in SE Kansas with out insurance 3 years a go...I sold that farm for a slight profit on the land. I wasnt married to it as Missouri is home.
Farmers were borrowing money against assets they had, land mostly and machinery, land values got too high, then corrected. Now the land they paid $1500 an acre for devalued to $500, the bank borrowed you $1200 on it. The lenders then claimed you didn't have enough collateral, and foreclosed driving the prices of land even lower.
Started farming in 65. Kept expanding with blessings from bank. Carter gets in and interest rates get to 18%. Along with Russian grain embargo and carter policies got in trouble. Bank would loan money for cattle when feeders were high. Next year when we thought feeder cattle would work bank said no. Struggled many years. I see this happening now to the more ambitious and aggressive farmers. Worry about relatives and neighbors.
There is still a lot of 18% interest paid today Any small farm that is struggling financially tends to have debt outside of the bank It's very easy to have $50000 of debt on 18% + interest today $50000 was a lot of money in the 80s I would think the 80s had to be easy compared to todoys financially strapped farmer
My Dad went through all that high interest in the early 80's when he was first starting. He also was buying grass calves, made money the first year, but every year after that he was buying high and selling low. Damn near lost his farm, what saved him was milking cows. FHA garnished his milk check so all his payments were current with them but as dad said we damn near starved to death. He also did alot of custom work to make extra money. He never got a govt write off like many did. So now today he can hold his head high that he survived that all by working hard. I've had my tough times getting started buy I never went through anything like he did. I can't imagine paying interest that high.
My dad drove a tractor to Washington DC and participated in the American Agricultural Movement tractorcade in 1979. While in DC he and other farmers met with, from what my dad described as a sort of clandestine group of people that spoke with them and told them that they respected what they were doing but that they would not achieve anything because that was not part of the plan that the elite had for America. They went further to explain that the long term strategy in place by the people that control the world included bankrupting and or simply driving the small family farm out of business and for large corporate farms to take their place. Their desire was to move people off the land into big cities where they would be easier to control. Most people in 1979 who heard this let in go in one ear and out the other but anyone with an ounce of common sense can take one look and tell you that everything has gone according to their plan.
Farmed through the 80s, 90s,2000s, busted my ass, retired now filthy rich now I tells ya! Nobody wanted to take over cause pretty much the same bleak future in it! High prices for everything, except what you want sell!
I promise you there’s a young guy like myself who would love to take over or buy you out. But he probably can’t pay what the 40-60 year olds can for your land and doesn’t have much to his name
We nearly lost our farm in the uk due to massive interest rates, it was mental around 17% and was very hard to keep the farm and most these days wouldn’t believe how hard it was back then !
I think the real root of the problem came under president Nixon. I remember him calling for the farmers to plant fence row to fence row because demand was high for American agricultural products. Then I believe before the end of the growing season, because of some issue with Russia, he imposed a grain embargo against Russia. That destroyed our credibility along with causing prices to plummet. I think the grain still ended up in Russia by going through some other country. All was well and good with the embargo until he wanted to expand it to include other things such as equipment. You never heard so much complaining because that was going to cause some people who worked for Caterpillar to lose their jobs. Along about that same time, there were people from America going to other countries such as Brazil to teach them how to grow soybeans. I don't know what the ulterior motive was but probably had something to do with keeping food prices cheap so the elected beurocrats could remain in power to stuff their pockets.
The United States grain embargo against the Soviet Union was enacted by US President Jimmy Carter in January 1980 in response to the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. The embargo remained in effect until Ronald Reagan ended it in 1981 upon taking the office of president.
Yes, Political, financial, fiscal shenanigans then, before, and to now. If recall well, read about Nixon protesting Argentina, Australia, NZ, France, Canada etc agreeing to sell foods/ agricultural products to labeled "Red China". At the time "Red China" had population of about 800 million and was short of foods so sought to buy agricultural products from other countries. Nixon & gang switched attitude went to China met Mao so to get in on selling agricultural products. Of course, cuts went to the gang. FFWD to now labeled China has population of about 1.5 Trillion people and exports agricultural products around world. Besides becoming go-to manufacturing place by West and others. Go figure? But the politicians, financiers, bankers, etc stil in games big time profiting plus, plus on both-ends off deplorables no matter what country they are in.
Terrible droughts here in Missouri in both 1980 and 1988. Crop insurance did not provide a floor like it does today. I have farmed for 40 years and I am more concerned today about conditions than I ever have been. I pray for the young and discouraged. Important for their spouses and families to encourage them.
I am discouraged...Its may 15 2024 and some guys havent turned a stone...But, I have seen this all before...I am discouraged about world events and the neo-bolsheviks mostly in DC.
A couple years back I talked to a guy in his 90s and his take on it was land prices exploded and the commodity price couldn’t support it. In his words back in the 1980s if you didn’t want to sell your land, you kept your mouth shut because you could throw out some absurd number and somebody would pay it.
I lived this whole damn period in the prime of my life and it was a SOB! You can work your butt off but if the timing is wrong in the economic cycle you are just screwed. The comments about being smart and not spending money or buying land or machinery are Bullshit. As you can tell I am pretty angry but my wife and I work 10 years for absolutely nothing and her parents give up 1200 acres to boot.
I heard “You’re not working hard enough and so we’re going to go bankrupt and lose the farm because of you,” at 5 years old. Forced manual stoop field labor. Never paid. Not good times, no. Tell me, city folk, that you have it worse.
@@coloradobrad6779 me also,growing up on a small dairy farm ,never paid always helping ,but irecieved hot meal ,potatoes and vegetables , for free every day , so my childhood was GREAT.
I bought my land during the Government whole herd buy oiut program. Which was to do away with excess milk production. My land is in the new 4b growing area. Because of the short growing season, some years frost free only Memorial Day to Labor Day, corn varieties of the time wouln't mature enough for grain harvest. Corn was used for sileage. Growing beans was unheard of. So after dairy was gone, the land had little value except for hay. Good land was in the $300 acre range. Since then, genetics has developeed long day short season corn & bean varieties, Yields with the right growing conditions are excellent.
Turning every pasture and woods in the Midwest into a field doesn’t help. We have such an over production of corn that they had to come up with things like ethanol and high fructose corn syrup to get rid of it
For Dairy farms the end to the parity price support, Jan of 1981, was a major factor. I wrote a paper in college about this in the early 2000's. My parent's blamed Reagan but it was not his fault. I learned that there was so much overproduction in the Dairy industry that the government just couldn't sustain support payments any longer. When the government support ended, the price of milk suddenly dropped and then stagnated for 15 - 20 years.
It turned 90 percent of pasture and tillable acres back into woods up here in north east Minnesota. It didn’t help that the steel market crashed at the same time. Many families just got up and left.
Since the 1960's I have watched Small farms be replaced by industrial Farming Operations. The number of Farms to control with Ag Prices and expensive equipment, are simply profit producers. It began in 1967 when they stopped using the Railroads to sort and deliver Mail. That duty is a Constitutionally mandated issue, that appeared to destroy a lot of small Towns and take the Small Farmers with.
@@davehughesfarm7983 A Post Office will hold a town together longer than any Politician can. I hauled Can Milk in 1969. That seems to be a vanished Art? The last few Milk Producers in our Valley, are served by an A- train. The last surviving Farmer who turns out His Cows, charges a lot for Milk. But remains popular. The Subdivisions use up the Water faster than the Politicians drink the Cash.
On my rural route we were 23 family farm units in 1978 when I began farming 200 some acres of prime sandy loam tilled and irrigated ... In 2024 we are 3 left . I am the only family sized one my next door neighbor owns 3000 acres and the next neighbor 5 miles down the route 5000 acres . Yeah, it is changing and ... Land is so expensive whenever any comes on the market ... We bought a 6130R JD last year and paid more for one tractor than the farm and farmhouse in 81 . I do not know how it is going to end ... Really I don't . Later thanks for he clip ; It was good .
You must roll back into the 70s when we were given a 10% Investment Credit on machinery purchases. This investment credit rate was a direct reduction of your tax liability by 10%. It was an incentive to build implement sales and it worked. I had a neighbor who was a seasoned second or maybe third generation farmer who completely changed the color of his machinery from red to green during the 70s. For the time of my being aware of what interest rates were, the pretty much standard interest rate on a machinery loan had been 8% for a long time. When Carter turned interest rates loose to seek their own level machinery note “floated” up to as much as 18 to as much as 22%. This was on an existing note that was initially an 8% note. That’s how farmers suddenly discovered one morning they were upside down and the banker showed up at your door with an auctioneer to line up your machinery for a sale. That neighbor eventually lost his “home place” even. I, I should say we, because without my wife working as an BSRN (nurse) in town, between the two of us and a banker that agreed that if I kept the interest paid up he’d extend the principal for me I got by without losing anything. It was a sad time. The situation became so severe that Hollywood got involved and a couple of movies were made about the farm families’ predicament. It even led to the actors, who weren’t farmers, were asked to testify before Congress! During the go-go 70s with the 10% Investment Credit, a generous depreciation schedule and raging inflation rates you could buy a new tractor, use it three years, the tractors still worth what you paid for it and you could trade it in on a new one! I did it! Twice!
Now were in the 2024 farming crisis. Im a 36 year old farmer here in ks and it hard to get out of bed every morning, its getting so bad. Thank god for my family.
If you have any intelligence run as fast as you can away from farming. Get a real job with benefits and take care of your family, farmers have 3 time the suicide rate of any group you do not want to be one.
From SE Texas: Was forced out in '81 3 banks and production credit office failed. Took several years to get back on track in Dad's cattle business in NM
Hey thanks for your post I find it very interesting. I'm South African and I didn't know about this one. I completed high school in 1980 and went on to do a 5 year apprenticeship as a diesel mechanic in the sugar industry in the hot low country in the northeast of Southern Africa. My father had a small vegetable and fruit farm where he grew oranges grapefruit and pecan nuts and kept his grocery store supplied with fresh vegetables all year round. I went on to a career in underground mining mostly because of the high pay but my heart and soul are always with my first love, farming ❤
As I remember one factor that played a role was the European Union started to subsidize their grain exports which helped to further depress grain prices. The USA started their own program in the mid eighties called the Export Enhancement Program. Not sure how the American program helped farmers because it wasn’t paid directly to them.
I was only 10 years old in 1982 but I remember my dad sold his tobacco pounds a couple years before and was put it all into soybeans. He and our neighbor was in together. They had older equipment that had been paid for, for years. And price was near 12$ a bushel. It was like that for a few years in a row. In 1984 he got out of the beans and was getting ready to sink it in beef. We already had some beef, about 69 head but he was going in bigger. I remember the soybean price that year dropped to below 4$ a bushel. Or sonething like that. He was pretty smart when it came to farming. Unfortunately he passed away that year due to cancer at 49. But his insight was very good.
On a different note as I watched your video. I saw many of the old farm equipment catalogs my grandfather picked up at the dealerships for my cousin and I.
I did too in my earlt teens..Sad Sad stuff...I was center of attention at one when Dad sold the 4440 JD..Brother and I were in the paper sitting in the dual at auction.
I was a young kid in the 80's. Life was hard. Our small farm never really flourished as every nickel went to mortgage and bills. Kind of like the 30's just with more modern stuff. Dairy cows got sold in 95, and got into beef just in time for BSE. I never really recovered. Still live below the poverty line and farming with horses and junk on poor rented land. There is no thanks from anyone, least of all the gov't.
One thing you forgot to mention, was the grain embargo that Jimmy Carter put on exports of soy beans. In 1979 in 1980 soy beans were 7 to 8 dollars a bushel. After he establish the grain embargo that put the price of soybeans per bushel in the tank and destroyed, lots of farmers. It was a bad decision for Jimmy Carter.
Yep. Busted our ass in the 80’s trying to make it on $3 corn and $5 beans all the while paying 14% interest on money. Finally through in the towel, sold the land and have never looked back!
For some strange reason, this is triggering childhood memories of the 1980s farming crisis and the conflicts the family farms had with the Reagan administration (along with the harsh comments by his budget director David Stockman).
Farming commodity prices are garbage now. Buying at retail, selling at wholesale. I heard last year only 13% of the farm land in iowa is paid off. Everyone wants 200-300 bushels per acre, what we forget is the more we produce the less its worth. We farm too good.
Most of this is true.. alot of the bigger farms you see today are a result of having debts erased and able to "play the game" . Not alot of honest farmers came out ahead durring the crisis. But guys that could rob Peter and file bankruptcy on pual did pretty well
''Most of the great problems we face (were &) are caused by politicians, bureaucrats, financiers, elites, bankers, pharma, MIC, big-agri, big-bus, msm, and kindred.....; creating solutions to problems they created in the first place." - Walter E. Williams
Nobody ever addresses that over production plays a major role in commodity pricing! Roosevelt new this hence is crp program in the new deal! It's simple economics supply and demand! More is not always better but farmer's always think more harvest more money not the case!
Too many big & centralized buyers of those commodities & products. Big business processors, like dairy, feedlots, etc LOVE all the govt regulation. They even help Congress write the laws. Intent is to stack on so many regs & requirements so that no new entrants into the mkt come online & compete against entrenched big biz.....AKA "regulatory capture". Ask who & why smaller local slaughterhouses shut down...ask why so few cheese processors now.....ask why such vertical integration of broilers & hogs...all the "big guys" in those endeavors co-write the costly regulations
If you were borrowing money to expand the farm from 1978 to 1994 you were in trouble. Crop prices were one third the price. Just like now over the last 18 months things have tripled in price for the consumer. Try the opposite fot the producer, drop their pay by two thirds and if your in debt you weren't making it. Those not it debt still had to get a small side job just to keep farm going, unless they had thousands of dollars in family money in the bank, or wife went out and became a nurse bringing in &50,000 a year, tough times.
It's a decent attempt at a video. You need to actually include something interesting. What you covered factually is not wrong but you need to do a lot more research before you make a video like this. You are treating the topic like it was just a macro movement, conditions changed and all went to shits. Which, while being true, is not really particularly informative. There are a lot of shady buisness practices on the part of banks to explore. Legislation intended to aid (if by force) agglomeration of farms. Last but not least, this was very intense for a lot of people. Skyrocketing suicide rates and economic depression in some areas that haven't yet come to an end. Also, normally I wouldn't write a comment like this but since these issues are current right with huge problems for a lot of farmers all over the world. You will have viewers who are looking for answers, living a farming collapse again. Do them justice, put in the work.
I agree with you, definitely would have been a lot better video to go in depth with but i was trying to make this video for people that haven't ever been involved in farming and possibly never heard of the crash in the 80s. Thanks for the feedback and watching.
Nixon opened up the farming with China. To help out this crisis. I wanted to farm but my uncles said there is no money. Soil bank come to and end. Farm fields stayed producing more. And big money got involved. Farm machinery show in Louisville Kentucky. Shows at lot. First time I was at the show was in 1978. 2 nd time. 2024. Big difference. In the industry. Now China has stopped buying grain from US. What will the end result. Later.
No 99 cent corn and 3 dollar beans. With farmers that did not believe in government handouts and a country that was importing grain from South America that the taxpayers paid to plant. My dad and plenty of farmers I grew up died from the stress of 99 cent corn and 3 dollar beans.
In Canada it was Trudeaus liberal government and the 19 % interest rates. Thank god my mother worked in a bank in younger years and knew how to manage money and we survived after buying the farm in 1979 . God bless all
We want producers to be prosperous but, not at the soil, water, and wild resources expanse. If we’re gonna ask farmers to steward the land, we all need to help cover this cost.
Now we got all these experts running around like chip flory telling us our yields in july, august before the crop is even in the bin. He should go count JD tractors or Winnebago motor homes coming out of the back door of the factories.
Several things: Carter grain embargo of 1980; all medium term loans were not at fixed interest rates which went from 6% to 20%; bigger, more expensive equipment meant farming more acres to pay for it which caused land prices to rise unsustainably; then the droughts of '83 and '88. I started farming in '83 and still at it 41 years later. However, it was much easier for a beginning farmer to make it then than it is today.
“Banks lending money like candy” dident the do the same thing all over again in the 2000s, Iend money for over priced houses, then the housing market collapsed, and some one that borrowed 1 million for a house, a few years later, worth only $540 thousand? Mortgage was for more than the house was worth, same thing happened in farming.
I lived it. The board of trade, Cargill, Indiana grain and the politicians made the money. Now lets talk giving the steel industry to Japan and South Korea. Wasn't it Ronalds Reagan's speech with don Regan on the white house lawn. Im going to make this a service county. Manpower temporary service became the number one employer.. yes lets blame the farmer. Shall we.
@@willbass2869 The Reagan tax cuts stimulated the economy and the Fed did not intervene as the economy superheated. The farm crisis was simply bad monetary policy based upon "trickle down" economics. The billionaires of today and their inherited wealth started their journey at that point in time.
@@GeigerFarm "fed didn't intervene" What kind of id!it are you? Paul Volker jacked up fed rates so high that interest rates got up close to or at 20% in an attempt to kill Carter's inflation. What f'n-planet are you from? This is like the most well documented text book case of how to stop inflation Gtfoh
The choice of video clips and images is a complete joke. The narration is also leaves quite a bit to be desired, not to mention the mispeak on several words. Is there anyone reviewing these videos and their content, before they are published? It seems quite AI driven. I will not subscribe any longer.
I started farming in 82 , things looked pretty good. Then European subsidies caused grain prices to tank .my parents who I was in partnership with got killed in a car accident. I started changing over to cattle and just managed to build a herd when bse hit . Just when cattle and grain started to recover , two years back to back total drought. Then after that I had a big divorce settlement . Followed by the winter of 2012 , we got a foot of snow on Oct 6 and it never melted till May , but ran out of feed in feb. Just never seemed to get out from under the rock
I hope to God things have improved and you are having some ease now.
Been there, done that. Saved my land base, but have found it's easier to farm for someone else and get paid every week. I also get to play with new toys without paying for them.. Life is good now.
So did i,problems than drought, I fought threw it and still am farming on a small scale but depth free
@@andrewmellon5072 I didn't loose the land , but my machinery was wore out and the idea of trying to rebuild my cattle herd at 50 and nobody to take over , I didn't want to go deep into dept , just in time to retire
I hope you have a long and enjoyable retirement. I live in Ireland, my only son is a nurse, living in Australia married to an Australian so I know about passing on farms. I am retired 70 yers old. I rent out land and just keep 16 ewes which I am lambing now out side. I am glad it worked out.
Foreign countries and weather can’t be controlled but 19% interest only helps the wealthy people. Our own politicians are to blame for the farming crisis of the 1980s. Most of the large scale farms around that are thriving now are the lucky few that had debt forgiven.
or barely scrapped by.
or barely scrapped by.
Lending in the 70’s was done on demand notes with floating interest.
A fixed interest on a bank note was unheard of.
As inflation got out of hand under Jimmy Carter, the floating interest rates on those demand notes went as high as 22%.
Most farmers couldn’t even pay the interest on their bank notes, much less the principal
I started farming in 1979, was very careful with every dollar i made, and invested back into my grain/hog farm. All used equipment, didn't borrow more than i could figure out how to pay back at any point. Never inherited anything, now own 1,000 acres in northern Illinois. So it could be done inspite of all the obstacles, and i faced all the same ones the rest did.
you did well sir....
Good day from Ontario, Good for u yes interest in 1980 hit over 20%, divide that into 72 3-4 yrs it doubles.
New machinery with costs never made money. A new pkup almost 80-90 thousand. Ths
The value of Farm Land was purposefully inflated. They lured landowners to take out loans based on the artificially inflated land prices, and then called in the notes when land values plummetted. A simple land grab.
City Market manipulation suckering parochial farmers
Yes...Some real bad bastards in the banks back then...
Factory dairy farms crushed the dairy farmers in my area. Milk prices tanked and so did the farms.
My grandpa said it was all do to irresponsible borrowing on the farmers and irresponsible lending. Add in dry conditions and he watched a lot of his neighbors fail. I was super young so all I have were his stories and inherited land from his estate. Most his neighbors who had to have new shiny equipment lost it all in the end. That's all I know.
Your Grandfather was a very wise man !
Now you need to be like grandpa, don't borrow against it and hang onto it! Just act like you don't have it.
@@MrNobody2828 we already have plans on place to pass it on to my children. Share ownership with brothers it's set in stone to keep the legacy going
I was a young boy in that era. To this day the old man has always reminded me do not forget the 1980’s (he’s a good teacher). The farm couldn’t carry itself because of high interest rates taking away profit on rented or crop share land. In addition I remember 1988 and dad harvesting 6 bpa soybeans. Like others mentioned it was a perfect storm of variables contributing to the demise. I’ve farmed over 2 decades myself and I still think of the 80’s often. Sadly I can see this narrative could repeat itself.
I harvested 3 bpa deans in SE Kansas with out insurance 3 years a go...I sold that farm for a slight profit on the land. I wasnt married to it as Missouri is home.
beans
Farmers were borrowing money against assets they had, land mostly and machinery, land values got too high, then corrected. Now the land they paid $1500 an acre for devalued to $500, the bank borrowed you $1200 on it. The lenders then claimed you didn't have enough collateral, and foreclosed driving the prices of land even lower.
You just told some of the true reasons of the 1980's I can remember it started in the 1970's but took that long to catch up
Started farming in 65. Kept expanding with blessings from bank. Carter gets in and interest rates get to 18%. Along with Russian grain embargo and carter policies got in trouble. Bank would loan money for cattle when feeders were high. Next year when we thought feeder cattle would work bank said no. Struggled many years. I see this happening now to the more ambitious and aggressive farmers. Worry about relatives and neighbors.
18% interest was biggest killer. Who would survive 18 interest today as a 30 year old?
There is still a lot of 18% interest paid today
Any small farm that is struggling financially tends to have debt outside of the bank
It's very easy to have $50000 of debt on 18% + interest today
$50000 was a lot of money in the 80s
I would think the 80s had to be easy compared to todoys financially strapped farmer
My Dad went through all that high interest in the early 80's when he was first starting. He also was buying grass calves, made money the first year, but every year after that he was buying high and selling low. Damn near lost his farm, what saved him was milking cows. FHA garnished his milk check so all his payments were current with them but as dad said we damn near starved to death. He also did alot of custom work to make extra money. He never got a govt write off like many did. So now today he can hold his head high that he survived that all by working hard. I've had my tough times getting started buy I never went through anything like he did. I can't imagine paying interest that high.
Typically its 18% apr at a CO-OP but I pretty much pay mine within 2 months..fertilizer first....Then seed....Then spray..
My dad drove a tractor to Washington DC and participated in the American Agricultural Movement tractorcade in 1979. While in DC he and other farmers met with, from what my dad described as a sort of clandestine group of people that spoke with them and told them that they respected what they were doing but that they would not achieve anything because that was not part of the plan that the elite had for America. They went further to explain that the long term strategy in place by the people that control the world included bankrupting and or simply driving the small family farm out of business and for large corporate farms to take their place. Their desire was to move people off the land into big cities where they would be easier to control. Most people in 1979 who heard this let in go in one ear and out the other but anyone with an ounce of common sense can take one look and tell you that everything has gone according to their plan.
My Dad was there...Even on Good Morning America interview.
Dad was one of them that went behind closed doors..
And yet here we are and they are pushing all this bolshevik shit again..
Here in Missouri the dairy buyout ruined many small towns that depended on farmers to keep their economies going.
Farmed through the 80s, 90s,2000s, busted my ass, retired now filthy rich now I tells ya! Nobody wanted to take over cause pretty much the same bleak future in it! High prices for everything, except what you want sell!
I promise you there’s a young guy like myself who would love to take over or buy you out. But he probably can’t pay what the 40-60 year olds can for your land and doesn’t have much to his name
We nearly lost our farm in the uk due to massive interest rates, it was mental around 17% and was very hard to keep the farm and most these days wouldn’t believe how hard it was back then !
I think the real root of the problem came under president Nixon. I remember him calling for the farmers to plant fence row to fence row because demand was high for American agricultural products. Then I believe before the end of the growing season, because of some issue with Russia, he imposed a grain embargo against Russia. That destroyed our credibility along with causing prices to plummet. I think the grain still ended up in Russia by going through some other country. All was well and good with the embargo until he wanted to expand it to include other things such as equipment. You never heard so much complaining because that was going to cause some people who worked for Caterpillar to lose their jobs. Along about that same time, there were people from America going to other countries such as Brazil to teach them how to grow soybeans. I don't know what the ulterior motive was but probably had something to do with keeping food prices cheap so the elected beurocrats could remain in power to stuff their pockets.
The United States grain embargo against the Soviet Union was enacted by US President Jimmy Carter in January 1980 in response to the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. The embargo remained in effect until Ronald Reagan ended it in 1981 upon taking the office of president.
Yes, Political, financial, fiscal shenanigans then, before, and to now.
If recall well, read about Nixon protesting Argentina, Australia, NZ, France, Canada etc agreeing to sell foods/ agricultural products to labeled "Red China".
At the time "Red China" had population of about 800 million and was short of foods so sought to buy agricultural products from other countries.
Nixon & gang switched attitude went to China met Mao so to get in on selling agricultural products. Of course, cuts went to the gang.
FFWD to now labeled China has population of about 1.5 Trillion people and exports agricultural products around world. Besides becoming go-to manufacturing place by West and others.
Go figure?
But the politicians, financiers, bankers, etc stil in games big time profiting plus, plus on both-ends off deplorables no matter what country they are in.
Carter grain embargo’s because USSR invaded Afghanistan. The USA became the reliable supplier
Terrible droughts here in Missouri in both 1980 and 1988. Crop insurance did not provide a floor like it does today. I have farmed for 40 years and I am more concerned today about conditions than I ever have been. I pray for the young and discouraged. Important for their spouses and families to encourage them.
I am discouraged...Its may 15 2024 and some guys havent turned a stone...But, I have seen this all before...I am discouraged about world events and the neo-bolsheviks mostly in DC.
A couple years back I talked to a guy in his 90s and his take on it was land prices exploded and the commodity price couldn’t support it. In his words back in the 1980s if you didn’t want to sell your land, you kept your mouth shut because you could throw out some absurd number and somebody would pay it.
Kinda seems like what has been happening the last few years.
Its happening now because people have forgotten the past and more will fail
I lived this whole damn period in the prime of my life and it was a SOB! You can work your butt off but if the timing is wrong in the economic cycle you are just screwed. The comments about being smart and not spending money or buying land or machinery are Bullshit. As you can tell I am pretty angry but my wife and I work 10 years for absolutely nothing and her parents give up 1200 acres to boot.
I heard “You’re not working hard enough and so we’re going to go bankrupt and lose the farm because of you,” at 5 years old. Forced manual stoop field labor. Never paid. Not good times, no. Tell me, city folk, that you have it worse.
@@coloradobrad6779 me also,growing up on a small dairy farm ,never paid always helping ,but irecieved hot meal ,potatoes and vegetables , for free every day , so my childhood was GREAT.
You never said what the cause was! 20% interest rates where greedy bankers and politicians had a heyday
My farming grandparents talk about how terrible it was, my financial grandparents talk about how awesome it was.
I bought my land during the Government whole herd buy oiut program. Which was to do away with excess milk production. My land is in the new 4b growing area. Because of the short growing season, some years frost free only Memorial Day to Labor Day, corn varieties of the time wouln't mature enough for grain harvest. Corn was used for sileage. Growing beans was unheard of. So after dairy was gone, the land had little value except for hay. Good land was in the $300 acre range. Since then, genetics has developeed long day short season corn & bean varieties, Yields with the right growing conditions are excellent.
Turning every pasture and woods in the Midwest into a field doesn’t help. We have such an over production of corn that they had to come up with things like ethanol and high fructose corn syrup to get rid of it
They're still doing it. Ripping out fence lines as fast as they can here in Wisconsin.
Dudes my age in 40's and 50's dozed out all their grandfathers fences and hedge rows...
For Dairy farms the end to the parity price support, Jan of 1981, was a major factor. I wrote a paper in college about this in the early 2000's. My parent's blamed Reagan but it was not his fault. I learned that there was so much overproduction in the Dairy industry that the government just couldn't sustain support payments any longer. When the government support ended, the price of milk suddenly dropped and then stagnated for 15 - 20 years.
It turned 90 percent of pasture and tillable acres back into woods up here in north east Minnesota. It didn’t help that the steel market crashed at the same time. Many families just got up and left.
Since the 1960's I have watched Small farms be replaced by industrial Farming Operations.
The number of Farms to control with Ag Prices and expensive equipment,
are simply profit producers.
It began in 1967 when they stopped using the Railroads to sort and deliver Mail.
That duty is a Constitutionally mandated issue,
that appeared to destroy a lot of small Towns and take the Small Farmers with.
And many other things..Wal-Mart, super hog farms, then short lie RR's, then meth..
@@davehughesfarm7983 A Post Office will hold a town together longer than any Politician can.
I hauled Can Milk in 1969.
That seems to be a vanished Art?
The last few Milk Producers in our Valley,
are served by an A- train.
The last surviving Farmer who turns out His Cows,
charges a lot for Milk.
But remains popular.
The Subdivisions use up the Water
faster than the Politicians drink the Cash.
We’re still in this debt crisis..
On my rural route we were 23 family farm units in 1978 when I began farming 200 some acres of prime sandy loam tilled and irrigated ... In 2024 we are 3 left . I am the only family sized one my next door neighbor owns 3000 acres and the next neighbor 5 miles down the route 5000 acres . Yeah, it is changing and ... Land is so expensive whenever any comes on the market ... We bought a 6130R JD last year and paid more for one tractor than the farm and farmhouse in 81 .
I do not know how it is going to end ... Really I don't . Later thanks for he clip ; It was good .
I remember the 80's in a farm community, car dealership closed, bank stopped lending and drought.
Small towns are a shell of what they were.
You must roll back into the 70s when we were given a 10% Investment Credit on machinery purchases. This investment credit rate was a direct reduction of your tax liability by 10%. It was an incentive to build implement sales and it worked. I had a neighbor who was a seasoned second or maybe third generation farmer who completely changed the color of his machinery from red to green during the 70s. For the time of my being aware of what interest rates were, the pretty much standard interest rate on a machinery loan had been 8% for a long time. When Carter turned interest rates loose to seek their own level machinery note “floated” up to as much as 18 to as much as 22%. This was on an existing note that was initially an 8% note. That’s how farmers suddenly discovered one morning they were upside down and the banker showed up at your door with an auctioneer to line up your machinery for a sale. That neighbor eventually lost his “home place” even. I, I should say we, because without my wife working as an BSRN (nurse) in town, between the two of us and a banker that agreed that if I kept the interest paid up he’d extend the principal for me I got by without losing anything. It was a sad time. The situation became so severe that Hollywood got involved and a couple of movies were made about the farm families’ predicament. It even led to the actors, who weren’t farmers, were asked to testify before Congress! During the go-go 70s with the 10% Investment Credit, a generous depreciation schedule and raging inflation rates you could buy a new tractor, use it three years, the tractors still worth what you paid for it and you could trade it in on a new one! I did it! Twice!
@@mikemaricle9941 N, Missouri and S, Iowa are some of the worst. They got wrecked in the 80's/90's
Now were in the 2024 farming crisis. Im a 36 year old farmer here in ks and it hard to get out of bed every morning, its getting so bad. Thank god for my family.
If you have any intelligence run as fast as you can away from farming. Get a real job with benefits and take care of your family, farmers have 3 time the suicide rate of any group you do not want to be one.
Reppin for Kansas
Same age and state. Only reason I’m still running is my equipment is from 1978-1982
I'm 41 in Ohio , farming with eupment from the 60s and 70s , btos all have new equipment and pickups
Hang in there Brother!
Best Wishes from Montana! M.H
From SE Texas: Was forced out in '81
3 banks and production credit office failed. Took several years to get back on track in Dad's cattle business in NM
Here in Canada high interest rates caused farmers to lose farms.
Hey thanks for your post I find it very interesting. I'm South African and I didn't know about this one.
I completed high school in 1980 and went on to do a 5 year apprenticeship as a diesel mechanic in the sugar industry in the hot low country in the northeast of Southern Africa.
My father had a small vegetable and fruit farm where he grew oranges grapefruit and pecan nuts and kept his grocery store supplied with fresh vegetables all year round.
I went on to a career in underground mining mostly because of the high pay but my heart and soul are always with my first love, farming ❤
As I remember one factor that played a role was the European Union started to subsidize their grain exports which helped to further depress grain prices. The USA started their own program in the mid eighties called the Export Enhancement Program. Not sure how the American program helped farmers because it wasn’t paid directly to them.
Seeds trouble in the 1970. What started here the housing market and farming issues. Both having to do with cheap easy money .
I was only 10 years old in 1982 but I remember my dad sold his tobacco pounds a couple years before and was put it all into soybeans. He and our neighbor was in together. They had older equipment that had been paid for, for years. And price was near 12$ a bushel. It was like that for a few years in a row. In 1984 he got out of the beans and was getting ready to sink it in beef. We already had some beef, about 69 head but he was going in bigger. I remember the soybean price that year dropped to below 4$ a bushel. Or sonething like that. He was pretty smart when it came to farming. Unfortunately he passed away that year due to cancer at 49. But his insight was very good.
On a different note as I watched your video. I saw many of the old farm equipment catalogs my grandfather picked up at the dealerships for my cousin and I.
Get rid of USDA . If you have to turn in your equipment park it at your state capitol or DC
Watched WAY TOO MANY farm auctions!!!😢
I did too in my earlt teens..Sad Sad stuff...I was center of attention at one when Dad sold the 4440 JD..Brother and I were in the paper sitting in the dual at auction.
Picture at 1:45 is from JD Woods rice farm located between Katy and Brookshire TX
Thats super cool! Thanks for watching
Even the elevators and farm supplies like ag chemicals went under
High land prices, high interest and low commodity prices are happening all over again.
Hear hear! Chickens are coming home on the 50k pickup guys.
I was a young kid in the 80's. Life was hard. Our small farm never really flourished as every nickel went to mortgage and bills. Kind of like the 30's just with more modern stuff. Dairy cows got sold in 95, and got into beef just in time for BSE. I never really recovered. Still live below the poverty line and farming with horses and junk on poor rented land. There is no thanks from anyone, least of all the gov't.
Yep the answer to the problem is there. When I find we team that’s not interested in destroying and being greedy…
One thing you forgot to mention, was the grain embargo that Jimmy Carter put on exports of soy beans. In 1979 in 1980 soy beans were 7 to 8 dollars a bushel. After he establish the grain embargo that put the price of soybeans per bushel in the tank and destroyed, lots of farmers. It was a bad decision for Jimmy Carter.
Earl Butz !
Yep. Busted our ass in the 80’s trying to make it on $3 corn and $5 beans all the while paying 14% interest on money.
Finally through in the towel, sold the land and have never looked back!
.....and how much does corn bring at the elevator today, almost 40 years later?
And the price of inputs and machinery today compared to 1980s
For some strange reason, this is triggering childhood memories of the 1980s farming crisis and the conflicts the family farms had with the Reagan administration (along with the harsh comments by his budget director David Stockman).
Farming commodity prices are garbage now. Buying at retail, selling at wholesale. I heard last year only 13% of the farm land in iowa is paid off. Everyone wants 200-300 bushels per acre, what we forget is the more we produce the less its worth. We farm too good.
Most of this is true.. alot of the bigger farms you see today are a result of having debts erased and able to "play the game" . Not alot of honest farmers came out ahead durring the crisis. But guys that could rob Peter and file bankruptcy on pual did pretty well
Very true
''Most of the great problems we face (were &) are caused by politicians, bureaucrats, financiers, elites, bankers, pharma, MIC, big-agri, big-bus, msm, and kindred.....; creating solutions to problems they created in the first place." - Walter E. Williams
IH and Allis Chalmers folded into other businesses.
Carter used the farmers as a weapon, not exporting grain in a protest against Russia. My parents operating loan went from 6% to 24%
Nobody ever addresses that over production plays a major role in commodity pricing! Roosevelt new this hence is crp program in the new deal! It's simple economics supply and demand! More is not always better but farmer's always think more harvest more money not the case!
Too many big & centralized buyers of those commodities & products.
Big business processors, like dairy, feedlots, etc LOVE all the govt regulation. They even help Congress write the laws. Intent is to stack on so many regs & requirements so that no new entrants into the mkt come online & compete against entrenched big biz.....AKA "regulatory capture".
Ask who & why smaller local slaughterhouses shut down...ask why so few cheese processors now.....ask why such vertical integration of broilers & hogs...all the "big guys" in those endeavors co-write the costly regulations
How can you not mention the policy of Jimmy Carter?
If you were borrowing money to expand the farm from 1978 to 1994 you were in trouble. Crop prices were one third the price. Just like now over the last 18 months things have tripled in price for the consumer. Try the opposite fot the producer, drop their pay by two thirds and if your in debt you weren't making it. Those not it debt still had to get a small side job just to keep farm going, unless they had thousands of dollars in family money in the bank, or wife went out and became a nurse bringing in &50,000 a year, tough times.
What lead the crisis was insolvency, too much unserviceable debt. LAND AND MACHINERY PURCHASES THAT COULD NEVER PAY FOR THEMSELVES.
It was interest rates.
It's a decent attempt at a video. You need to actually include something interesting. What you covered factually is not wrong but you need to do a lot more research before you make a video like this. You are treating the topic like it was just a macro movement, conditions changed and all went to shits. Which, while being true, is not really particularly informative. There are a lot of shady buisness practices on the part of banks to explore. Legislation intended to aid (if by force) agglomeration of farms. Last but not least, this was very intense for a lot of people. Skyrocketing suicide rates and economic depression in some areas that haven't yet come to an end.
Also, normally I wouldn't write a comment like this but since these issues are current right with huge problems for a lot of farmers all over the world. You will have viewers who are looking for answers, living a farming collapse again. Do them justice, put in the work.
Thank you for the thoughtful comment.
I agree with you, definitely would have been a lot better video to go in depth with but i was trying to make this video for people that haven't ever been involved in farming and possibly never heard of the crash in the 80s. Thanks for the feedback and watching.
Nixon opened up the farming with China. To help out this crisis. I wanted to farm but my uncles said there is no money. Soil bank come to and end. Farm fields stayed producing more. And big money got involved. Farm machinery show in Louisville Kentucky. Shows at lot. First time I was at the show was in 1978. 2 nd time. 2024. Big difference. In the industry. Now China has stopped buying grain from US. What will the end result. Later.
No 99 cent corn and 3 dollar beans. With farmers that did not believe in government handouts and a country that was importing grain from South America that the taxpayers paid to plant. My dad and plenty of farmers I grew up died from the stress of 99 cent corn and 3 dollar beans.
In Canada it was Trudeaus liberal government and the 19 % interest rates. Thank god my mother worked in a bank in younger years and knew how to manage money and we survived after buying the farm in 1979 . God bless all
What happened to the American Farmer! Ronald Regan, and Corporate Greed.
in 1980 my dad bought a new 1490 case david brown tractors
1979 Dad a 4440..Sold at farm crisis auction in 1985..
Too much government interference was one biggest problem
Irresponsible lending and borrowing. Same thing that caused the housing crash in 2008.
Very true, seems very similar to the path we are going down now. Thanks for watching
I think it goes back to government subsidies and corporate culture taking over the family farm. i blame it all on big government and lobbyists
Governments
We want producers to be prosperous but, not at the soil, water, and wild resources expanse. If we’re gonna ask farmers to steward the land, we all need to help cover this cost.
Farmers got greedy
Why not plant half density on 60" and not fertilize. The math works out better with these prices if you can get 75% of normal yield.
Carter Admin.
Now we got all these experts running around like chip flory telling us our yields in july, august before the crop is even in the bin. He should go count JD tractors or Winnebago motor homes coming out of the back door of the factories.
this might be coming back again. some people do not learn from the past
I wonder how come not all farmers went broke ? Maybe they were more careful ? Most of them they were doing wrong.
So many farmers survived and thrived during Carter, you didn’t do it must be carters fault not your poor business practices
Carter grain embargo. Banks lending money like candy . Cheap land high interest rates .
Several things: Carter grain embargo of 1980; all medium term loans were not at fixed interest rates which went from 6% to 20%; bigger, more expensive equipment meant farming more acres to pay for it which caused land prices to rise unsustainably; then the droughts of '83 and '88. I started farming in '83 and still at it 41 years later. However, it was much easier for a beginning farmer to make it then than it is today.
“Banks lending money like candy” dident the do the same thing all over again in the 2000s, Iend money for over priced houses, then the housing market collapsed, and some one that borrowed 1 million for a house, a few years later, worth only $540 thousand? Mortgage was for more than the house was worth, same thing happened in farming.
I lived it. The board of trade, Cargill, Indiana grain and the politicians made the money. Now lets talk giving the steel industry to Japan and South Korea. Wasn't it Ronalds Reagan's speech with don Regan on the white house lawn. Im going to make this a service county. Manpower temporary service became the number one employer.. yes lets blame the farmer. Shall we.
Jimmy Carter is what happened to the farmers. His poor leadership.
In that case, we are going to see it happen again soon. The Joe biden administration is even worse than Jimmy Carter.
Bottom line, what happened was and still is the u.s.federal government!!
Oddly enough, times seem to be the worst when 1 political party is in power, especially the executive branch. Imo.
frnklin roosevelt and the commust party
1930s
Locust MotorWorks?
one name jimmy Carter
Bs, Reagan was the reason.
@@kevinnoah-i4owhy was Reagan the cause?. State your reason or you're just b.s.
@@willbass2869 Reagan cut farm funding. Now bs me that Reagan cared.
@@willbass2869 The Reagan tax cuts stimulated the economy and the Fed did not intervene as the economy superheated. The farm crisis was simply bad monetary policy based upon "trickle down" economics. The billionaires of today and their inherited wealth started their journey at that point in time.
@@GeigerFarm "fed didn't intervene"
What kind of id!it are you?
Paul Volker jacked up fed rates so high that interest rates got up close to or at 20% in an attempt to kill Carter's inflation.
What f'n-planet are you from? This is like the most well documented text book case of how to stop inflation
Gtfoh
Jimmy Carter caused it quit telling us all this bulshit it was Jimmy Carter
Sounds alot like today every one borrows all there money
very true!
banksters
I disagree. Ronald Reagan destroyed the family farm and brought into play corporation farming.
Obama& Biden
No, your Daddy.
The choice of video clips and images is a complete joke. The narration is also leaves quite a bit to be desired, not to mention the mispeak on several words. Is there anyone reviewing these videos and their content, before they are published? It seems quite AI driven. I will not subscribe any longer.
Reagan failed farm policy.