Macroeconomic Impacts on the U.S. Agricultural Sector: A Quantitative Analysis for 1980-84
William H. Meyers, Michael D. Helmar, S. Devadoss, Robert E. Young II, David Blandford
November 1986 [86-WP 17]
Suggested citation:
Meyers, W.H., M.D. Helmar, S. Devadoss, R. Young, and D. Blandford. 1986. "Macroeconomic Impacts on the U.S. Agricultural Sector: A Quantitative Analysis for 1980-84." Working paper 86-WP 17. Center for Agricultural and Rural Development, Iowa State University.
Abstract
Agricultural trade problems have been receiving increased attention in the United States for the last few years. The reason is obvious. After a decade during which the value of agricultural exports grew from $8 billion annually to a peak of nearly $44 billion in 1981, both quantities and values of exports have fallen substantially. Recent U.S. Department of Agriculture (*SDA) estimates project $32 billion in farm exports in 1985. In the long history of U.S. agriculture, exports have often been a major force in agricultural prosperity and distress. It is a natural tendency, therefore, to look at export growth as a solution to the dismal state of the farm economy. Unfortunately, poor export performance is only one of a complex array of factors that have contributed to the current distress in agriculture and many of these factors are jointly related to macroeconomic policies and conditions as discussed by McCalla (1982); Freebairn, Rausser, and deGorter (1982); and Schuh (1984).