{"id":3624,"date":"1955-04-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1955-04-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1955-vol-36-no-4-the-farmers-income\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:30:58","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:30:58","slug":"april-1955-vol-36-no-4-the-farmers-income","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1955-vol-36-no-4-the-farmers-income\/","title":{"rendered":"April 1955 &#8211; Vol. 36, No. 4 &#8211; The Farmer&#8217;s Income"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> The farmer who works his own farm has a                     unique kind of independence. He is at once owner, manager,                     producer and merchant. He has no boss to tell him what to                     do. He can &#8211; and, indeed, must &#8211; exercise individuality, initiative                     and originality. He does not await the whims of others for                     his advancement, but reaps directly the benefits of his own                     enterprise.<\/p>\n<p>To stay in business, a farmer must seek an adequate income.                     This demands his attention to many varied activities and fields                     of knowledge. He must keep his soil fertile, plan his crop                     rotations, balance his livestock programme with available                     feed, and sell his produce to the best advantage. He needs                     to know how to control expense and make efficient use of labour                     and machinery. Failure to measure up well to any of these                     requirements is sure to result in at least lower income and                     at worst financial loss.<\/p>\n<p>A neat farmstead is usually an indication of a good farm                     manager, but hasty judgments should not be made. Not every                     unpainted building is an indication of slackness. The farmer                     may not have the time or the money to paint because he is                     waging a gallant battle against depletion of soil and is building                     up, year by year, a permanent capital in the way of productive                     farm land. The important things in farm management are to                     keep machinery in good repair, keep necessary fences standing,                     replace and maintain organic matter in the soil, eradicate                     weeds and other crop-impairing forces, and build or grow                     whatever protective devices are needed, such as ditches and                     wind-breaks.<\/p>\n<p>Agriculture is anything but static. To look back at farming                     in Canada&#8217;s early days &#8211; or even in the days of our grandfathers                     &#8211; is to see a picturesque scene, but that sort of farming                     will not do today. There are still some people content with                     subsistence farming, but most standards have risen. Farmers                     require income that provides the comforts of life as well                     as its necessities.<\/p>\n<h3>Supply and demand<\/h3>\n<p>The demand for farm products rises and falls in accord with                     the supply of produce and the purchasing power of consumers.                     The marketing system attempts to bring demand and supply into                     balance by storing produce in times of surplus for use in                     times of scarcity, and by fluctuations in prices.<\/p>\n<p>One thing is sure: human beings will continue to try to                     feed themselves adequately at least three times a day. That                     is the sole market for farm food-stuffs.<\/p>\n<p>G. S. Shepherd reported in <em>Marketing Farm Products <\/em>(1946)                     that the per capita consumption of food in the United States                     had remained practically constant over the preceding 35 years                     at about five pounds per person per day. The average consumption                     from 1909 to 1939 was 4.96 pounds; the average in 1935 to                     1939 was 4.91 pounds.<\/p>\n<p>The consumption of some foods, of course, has increased                     markedly, while that of others has decreased. Processing and                     packaging have brought changes, and methods of selling have                     affected the sale of food products.<\/p>\n<p>Addressing the Canadian Food Processors Association in February,                     F. T. Sherk recalled the old days when butchers, truck farmers                     and others peddled their wares from door to door, and contrasted                     that with present-day stores and super-markets.                     Sales in retail food stores, he said, increased 230 per cent                     during the ten years 1941 to 1951, while Canada&#8217;s population                     climbed only 22 per cent.<\/p>\n<p>Changes such as these complicate the income-getting                     effort of the farmer. The demand for basic food-stuffs                     does not keep pace with rises in family incomes. Except for                     the very low income groups, people spend proportionately less                     on food as their earnings increase. Low income means a greater                     consumption of cheaper foods such as grain products and potatoes;                     with rising income there comes a demand for meat, dairy and                     poultry products, fruits and vegetables.<\/p>\n<p>One of the first problems to be solved by the farmer, then,                     is that of what to produce. A characteristic feature of agriculture                     is its dependence upon area. A factory or a department store                     can expand upwards; a fishing fleet can sweep a wider arc                     of the ocean; a mining concern can go deeper into the earth.                     The farmer must do the best he can with the area comprised                     in his farm, to the depth of a few inches.<\/p>\n<h3>Value of Farms<\/h3>\n<p>Taking the farm as the unit of operation, the value of the                     capital per farm measures its resources in production of farm                     commodities. The census of 1951 provided figures that span                     fifty years in the development of Canadian farms:<\/p>\n<table width=\"415\" border=\"0\" cellpadding=\"4\" cellspacing=\"0\" class=\"mainbodytext\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"108\" valign=\"top\">&nbsp;<\/td>\n<td width=\"103\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">1901<\/td>\n<td width=\"104\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">1951<\/td>\n<td width=\"100\" valign=\"top\">&nbsp;<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"108\" valign=\"top\">&nbsp;<\/td>\n<td width=\"103\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">$<\/td>\n<td width=\"104\" valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">$<\/td>\n<td width=\"100\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">Per cent increase<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"108\" valign=\"top\">Total value<\/td>\n<td width=\"103\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">1,787,102,630<\/td>\n<td width=\"104\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">9,470,876,372<\/td>\n<td width=\"100\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">430<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"108\" valign=\"top\">Land &amp; buildings<\/td>\n<td width=\"103\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">1,403,269,501<\/td>\n<td width=\"104\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">5,527,207,155<\/td>\n<td width=\"100\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">294<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"108\" valign=\"top\">Implements &amp; machinery<\/td>\n<td width=\"103\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">108,665,502<\/td>\n<td width=\"104\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">1,933,312,262<\/td>\n<td width=\"100\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">1679<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"108\" valign=\"top\">Live-stock<\/td>\n<td width=\"103\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">275,167,627<\/td>\n<td width=\"104\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">2,010,356,955<\/td>\n<td width=\"100\" valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">630<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p>Most striking in this tabulation is the increase in machinery.                     Mechanization has, more or less according to other factors,                     lightened the physical load of the farmer and increased his                     efficiency; other machinery, not on the farm, has affected                     him by the change it has brought about in the processing of                     the raw product he provides.<\/p>\n<p>The change is well illustrated in an article by S. E. Johnson                     in the May 1950 issue of <em>The Journal of Farm Economics                     <\/em>(United States). He says that whereas in 1945 one farm                     worker produced enough to provide himself and about 14 other                     persons with agricultural products, in 1920 he produced enough                     for himself and nine other persons, and about a hundred years                     earlier only enough for himself and a little more than three                     other persons.<\/p>\n<p>However, no matter how ingenious a new agricultural machine                     may be, the farm manager must have wisdom to decide whether                     he needs it now, foresight to decide what its use will be,                     economically, in future years, and skill to fit it into the                     general scheme of his farm.<\/p>\n<p>D. L. MacFarlane, Professor of Economics at Macdonald College,                     made this point in an article he wrote for <em>Queens Quarterly<\/em>:                     &#8220;The presence of a tractor on a farm means neither that it                     is mechanized nor that it is an efficient unit. One frequently                     finds a tractor on a small farm in the west and on many farms                     where the total capital is well under $10,000. Both are economic                     anomalies.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>If little use is made of a machine the high proportion of                     total annual expense represented by depreciation makes the                     cost per day or per acre or per hour extremely high. As to                     operating costs, it will be recalled by many that early in                     the 1930&#8217;s many farmers put aside their tractors and returned                     to the use of horses because the machinery used a fuel that                     had to be paid for in cash whereas horses consumed one grown                     on the farm.<\/p>\n<h3>Farm income<\/h3>\n<p>With the mechanization of farms there has gone a corresponding                     decrease in the need for manpower, so that more and more workers                     have been released to enter industry and services. So great                     development has taken place in secondary industry and in services                     that only $1,900 million of the national income amounting                     to $19,043 million in 1953 was directly attributable to farm                     produce, less than 10 per cent.<\/p>\n<p>All revenue from farm operation is obtained through the                     sale of crops and live-stock, plus a little received                     in payment for off-farm and non-farm work. In 1954                     the cash income from the sale of farm products amounted to                     $2,409 million. It first passed the $2,000 million mark in                     1948, and since then has averaged $2,566 million a year.<\/p>\n<p>Many devices have been tried in the effort to stabilize                     farm income. High prices for his product do not spell prosperity                     for the farmer if to attain them he has to reduce his volume                     so much that his total income is reduced. Nor has any solution                     yet been found in schemes to reduce the marketing expenses.<\/p>\n<p>These are changing times, and nowhere are changes more apparent                     than in the production and marketing fields. Mention of a                     few examples will illustrate the fact. There is an increasing                     amount of time utility embodied in consumers&#8217; goods: many                     foods that were formerly seasonal are now provided the year                     round in various preserved forms. There is a new demand from                     consumers for goods in more elaborate form. They want foods                     in small quantities and in such shape that little or no processing                     at home is required. Bread, pastries and cake are bought,                     for the most part, ready-baked; vegetables come in tins,                     ready-cooked; bacon is sliced. The work our parents did                     in baking and preparing meals and cooking is now done by processors                     between the farmer and the consumer, and must be paid for.                     The costs include: processing to a more finished form, handling                     in smaller units, and wrapping in expensive packages.<\/p>\n<p>This is a trend that shows no sign of changing. Half of                     the book <em>Marketing Farm Products <\/em>is given over to                     discussing the question in the farmer&#8217;s mind about the spread                     between what he gets for the raw material and the consumption                     price at the end of the chain of distribution.<\/p>\n<p>There is little an individual farmer can do but accept the                     current price when he chooses to sell. He will do what he                     can to lower the cost of producing the commodities he sells,                     and lowering costs has the same pleasant effect upon net income                     as raising the price.<\/p>\n<h3>The business of farming<\/h3>\n<p>Poets and some philosophers have praised agriculture as                     an ideal way of life, sylvan, idyllic, &#8220;close to nature&#8221;;                     but farming is a business. The satisfactions that accrue to                     a farmer and his family in economic terms are fully as important                     as those that are social and aesthetic.<\/p>\n<p>No other industry demands so high a percentage of managers                     among its workers. The man who operates a farm needs an understanding                     of basic economics and knowledge in several natural sciences                     and some applied sciences such as agronomy and animal husbandry.                     After all is said that can be said regarding the economizing                     of land and the care of crops and live-stock, the actual                     working out of problems is the task of the farmer. Wise legislation                     and new scientific discoveries may create favourable conditions,                     but upon the farm manager rests the responsibility of making                     agriculture on his farm respond to these favourable conditions.<\/p>\n<p>Managerial skill in farming, as in any other enterprise,                     consists mainly in being able to see through the trees to                     a distant horizon, to work efficiently today, with tomorrow                     in mind, to plan so that a proper balance is kept between                     spending now and investing for the future. H. R. Hare, of                     the National Employment Service, said in his textbook <em>Farm                     Business Management<\/em>: &#8220;Surveys reveal that management                     is the dominant factor in determining the net returns from                     a farm business.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The farmer who wishes to improve his income surrounds his                     farm with a business atmosphere. He keeps abreast of improvements                     in farming methods, crop varieties, fertilizers and machines,                     even though he cannot put them all into practice at once.                     He plans his farm work well in advance, and completes ploughing,                     seeding, cultivating and harvesting at the proper time and                     with a reasonable degree of thoroughness. If not the first,                     at least he will not be the last, to adopt an improvement.                     Even if he is not mechanically minded he will learn enough                     to enable him to keep his machinery in running order and preserve                     it for long service.<\/p>\n<h3>Planning<\/h3>\n<p>The job of determining what to plant was easy for Louis                     H\u00e9bert when he turned over his first sod at Port Royal                     in 1604. All the farmer of that day had to do was to consider                     his family needs for food and clothing, and produce accordingly.<\/p>\n<p>The income wanted today is of a different sort and amount,                     and the penalty of failure to reach the desired objective                     is greater. The need for setting an objective and planning                     how to reach it is an imperative demand.<\/p>\n<p>Yet, by the very nature of agriculture, it is impossible                     to work by inflexible rules. Adjustments must be made to meet                     the conditions of climate, varying from year to year and from                     month to month, and the vagaries of the market in which a                     long-term trend may be halted or speeded up by sudden                     social or political changes at home or abroad.<\/p>\n<p>What is needed, then, by the farmer seeking to make the                     most of his life, is a general plan for years ahead, with                     specific plans for individual years, and detailed plans for                     the next twelve months. This demands basic knowledge gained                     from textbooks, personal experience and the experience of                     others, plus a continuing study of new information, some of                     which will be used now and some used to form opinions of what                     is to be expected in future.<\/p>\n<p>Where can the ambitious farmer obtain the information he                     needs? He will have a library containing a few reference books                     and many bulletins dealing with agricultural subjects. These                     bulletins are available in great variety from provincial and                     federal departments of agriculture, for the mere cost of a                     postage stamp. They are written by men who know farming on                     all levels &#8211; the level of the man behind the plough, the level                     of the government department seeking to help him make good,                     and the level of the economist who is watching the trends                     of national and international supply and demand.<\/p>\n<p>Immediate news will be learned from newspapers, daily, weekly                     and farm. A survey reported in <em>Food For Thought <\/em>a                     few years ago showed that 69 per cent of farmers in Canadian                     Farm Forum homes take a daily newspaper, 69 per cent take                     a local weekly newspaper, 91 per cent a farm paper, and 82                     per cent take more than one farm paper.<\/p>\n<p>A survey conducted on behalf of <em>The Country Guide <\/em>in                     1950 showed that in the three prairie provinces almost half                     of all farmer households subscribe to three or more farm papers,                     while nine out of ten farmer households subscribe to at least                     one farm paper.<\/p>\n<p>Obviously, Canadian farmers appreciate the sound contribution                     made by the agricultural press to the advancement of farming                     and the enrichment of rural life.<\/p>\n<p>As a clinching argument for the need for planning better                     farm methods, consider this statement by K. E. Boulding, of                     Iowa State College, at a meeting of the Canadian Political                     Science Association: &#8220;The mass of the agricultural poor in                     India, China, Eastern Europe, Africa, South America, even                     the Southern States, are poor not because they are exploited                     but simply because they are miserably unproductive and produce                     so little.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Getting and keeping control<\/h3>\n<p>The keeping of records is a burden to many people, to be                     avoided when possible, but it is only on the basis of records                     &#8211; our own and other people&#8217;s &#8211; that we can foresee probabilities                     and make plans to meet them.<\/p>\n<p>This bank, as well as other agencies interested in the well-being                     of agriculture, has for many years tried to make it easy for                     farmers to keep records. Our <em>Farmers&#8217; Account Book <\/em>gives                     the diligent farmer a practical and simple way of determining                     what farm enterprises are revenue producing and those that                     might better be dropped. It discloses where too much work                     is being done for the income obtained. It helps to show up                     little mistakes in management which may be replaced by profitable                     efforts. The book is free, and may be obtained at local branches                     of The Royal Bank of Canada.<\/p>\n<p>To keep farm records is not a matter merely of having rows                     of figures in neat columns, but of using the facts they reveal                     so as to make decisions that are right. As Mr. Hare says:                     &#8220;Farm records and accounts cannot create profits directly,                     but they&#8230;express the results of farm management in unmistakable                     terms of high or low profit or loss. They remove all doubt.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The man who has gained a farming reputation that extends                     beyond his fence lines will be found to be a man who gives                     himself every management chance by knowing where his income                     came from, what it is now, and how he can obtain an increased                     income next year.<\/p>\n<p>Farm records are useful in subsidiary ways. They help in                     obtaining low cost credit, for example. The farmer who can                     present a clear statement of his business shows that he knows                     what he is doing, and has a strong quality to recommend him                     as a good borrowing customer.<\/p>\n<p>Keeping records helps to control expenses, and low expense                     per bushel of wheat, per gallon of milk, per pound of beef                     and per dozen eggs is the key to profits. The margin between                     income and outgo is just as satisfactory if it is widened                     by efficient curtailment of outlay as if it is expanded by                     obtaining higher prices.<\/p>\n<p>Economy does not mean buying less fertilizer than the land                     requires, or buying inferior seed. It may even be that one&#8217;s                     farm records, when compared with authoritative records from                     comparable farms, will show the need to increase expenditure                     for seed, fertilizer and pest control preparations, when this                     expenditure can be expected to increase production per acre                     or per animal.<\/p>\n<p>Above all, it is good economy to conserve the farm&#8217;s soil.                     This vital factor in income has been dealt with in several                     Monthly Letters, notably those of August 1946, February 1951,                     and September 1952, copies of which are still available.<\/p>\n<h3>Farming is different<\/h3>\n<p>Farming has been, since the beginning of history, something                     different, something set apart. There is a flavour in farm                     life with a fundamental appeal to human nature, as witness                     the number of people who express the hope that some day they                     will achieve their life-long ambition: to live on their                     own farm.<\/p>\n<p>One of the bases of our western way of life is typified                     by the family farm in Canada. It has values that are not to                     be found in any scheme of collective farming. It not only                     provides satisfactions for the individuals engaged in it,                     but it is efficient in meeting the food needs of the country.                     Failure of collectivized agriculture in Russia was one reason                     given for the political upheaval in the U.S.S.R. early this                     year.<\/p>\n<p>Those who see deeper than others appreciate the character                     and dignity of rural life and work. The farm provides independence,                     the satisfaction of close communion with nature, and health-giving                     qualities. These are essential ideals of humanity, and must                     not be deprecated, but there is the other &#8211; and an important                     side to farming. It is a business, and a business must yield                     an income. There must be enough financial return to make possible                     the achievement of the dividends of life that advanced farmers                     desire.<\/p>\n<p>The young man thinking of taking up farming on his own should                     know that agriculture is a composite of many economic activities,                     of modes of living and of social functions, but it is still                     a business in which the character and energy of the manager                     count more than any other factor.<\/p>\n<p>Impatient people, people who want quick returns on their                     investment of money and labour, will find little in farming                     to attract them. People who lack initiative and enterprise                     and energy will prefer jobs where decisions are made for them;                     where they are always told by some authority what to do next.                     People who are timid, who recall the poet&#8217;s lines: &#8220;His life                     is a long-drawn question between a crop and a crop&#8221;,                     will seek first of all the security of working for someone                     else.<\/p>\n<p>But the farmer who approaches his job with the idea that                     farming is something to be made efficient and so profitable                     as to yield income sufficient to enable him and his family                     to enjoy the advantages and comforts of life will find many                     other things added: the loveliness of every year&#8217;s seed time                     and harvest, closeness to the heart of life and nature, and                     the spirit of the giant of antiquity, Antaeus, whose strength                     increased every time he touched the ground.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[35],"class_list":["post-3624","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-35"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>April 1955 - Vol. 36, No. 4 - The Farmer&#039;s Income - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1955-vol-36-no-4-the-farmers-income\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"April 1955 - Vol. 36, No. 4 - The Farmer&#039;s Income - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The farmer who works his own farm has a unique kind of independence. He is at once owner, manager, producer and merchant. He has no boss to tell him what to do. He can &#8211; and, indeed, must &#8211; exercise individuality, initiative and originality. 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He is at once owner, manager, producer and merchant. He has no boss to tell him what to do. He can &#8211; and, indeed, must &#8211; exercise individuality, initiative and originality. 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