January 16, 2013

2 Min Read
Texas Economist: Record-Large Corn Crop Possible

U.S. corn production, slashed dramatically by drought in 2012, could rebound to a record-large crop this year if yields improve moderately, said an agricultural economist from Texas A&M University on Monday in a report filed by Reuters.

Economist David Anderson also said pork production could top beef in 2014, pushing beef into third place in U.S. meat production. Poultry and pork production are on the rise while beef is held back by high feed costs and drought-damaged grassland.

“What we're trying to do is make it to the next crop,” Anderson said, describing how livestock producers face several more months, at a minimum, of tight feed supplies.

High commodity prices will encourage farmers to plant roughly as much corn as last year, he said, and with higher yields, “you get a record crop,” with lower prices that will ease the financial squeeze on livestock producers.

During a presentation at the annual American Farm Bureau Federation meeting, Anderson said corn plantings were likely to match the 97 million acres of 2012 and yields could run around 150 bu. an acre. With an average amount of abandonment, that would bring a crop of 13.4 billion bushels, topping the record of 13.092 billion bu. in 2009.

Large plantings allow a record crop even with below-average yields, Anderson said. “It just doesn't have to be as awful as last year.” The 2012 crop averaged 123.4 bu. an acre.

U.S. corn and soybean production has fallen for three years in a row with harsh weather pulling down yields. Drought persists in the Plains and western Corn Belt although rainfall levels in the eastern Corn Belt are improving.

On Sunday, Chad Hart, an Iowa State University agricultural economist, said corn, soybean and wheat yields “will likely remain below trend line in 2013” but production totals could “bump up.” He did not suggest harvest size.

Demand for U.S. meat will be stable to growing this year, with beef output falling and production of poultry and pork rising, Anderson said.. Pork exports are booming.

“I think it certainly could happen,” Anderson told reporters, for pork output to exceed beef in 2014. “They're very close at that point.”

 

 

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