Arlington - Global crop prices will retreat sharply this year as farmers around the world expand production, bringing stability back to commodity markets and easing food inflation fears, the US government forecast on Thursday.
After two years of razor thin stocks, world crop supplies, led by wheat, are recovering.
“Certainly the high prices that we saw last year have prompted a global production response for most commodities," USDA Chief Economist Joe Glauber told the agency’s annual outlook forum.
“This should help relieve some of the volatility that have roiled markets over the past five years and improve prospects for future livestock expansion,” he said.
Corn prices, a key barometer for farmers, could retreat 20% this year to around $5 a bushel while farm income would shrink 11.5%, the USDA forecast.
There are still a number of uncertainties in the forecast, Glauber noted, citing concerns about drought withering crops in South America and in the southern United States.
Weather, particularly in Texas, “will be a key concern this year”, he said.
Despite forecasts of lower prices, US farmers are expected to go on a planting binge this year. Planting of the eight major crops in the United States was forecast to rise 2.2% to 254.4 million acres from 2011.
It would be the largest area sown to wheat, corn, sorghum, barley, oats, rice, soybeans and upland cotton since 258.6 million acres in 1997, another boom time for US agriculture.
The estimate was up 1.3% from a projection made in early February, due to larger soybean and wheat plantings.
Farmers will sow some 94 million acres of corn this year - enough to grow the first 14 billion bushel crop, USDA projected.
The plantings would be up 2 million acres from last year. The extra supplies will help boost corn stocks, along with a slowing in the demand for ethanol.
“Slowing demand for ethanol means corn stocks will likely increase in 2012, assuming a return to trend yields,” Glauber said.
Glauber said the farm community’s “debt picture still continues to be quite, quite good” following a spike in land prices.
US agriculture exports are expected to fall $1bn to $131bn this year, but it will still be the second-highest on record.
After two years of razor thin stocks, world crop supplies, led by wheat, are recovering.
“Certainly the high prices that we saw last year have prompted a global production response for most commodities," USDA Chief Economist Joe Glauber told the agency’s annual outlook forum.
“This should help relieve some of the volatility that have roiled markets over the past five years and improve prospects for future livestock expansion,” he said.
Corn prices, a key barometer for farmers, could retreat 20% this year to around $5 a bushel while farm income would shrink 11.5%, the USDA forecast.
There are still a number of uncertainties in the forecast, Glauber noted, citing concerns about drought withering crops in South America and in the southern United States.
Weather, particularly in Texas, “will be a key concern this year”, he said.
Despite forecasts of lower prices, US farmers are expected to go on a planting binge this year. Planting of the eight major crops in the United States was forecast to rise 2.2% to 254.4 million acres from 2011.
It would be the largest area sown to wheat, corn, sorghum, barley, oats, rice, soybeans and upland cotton since 258.6 million acres in 1997, another boom time for US agriculture.
The estimate was up 1.3% from a projection made in early February, due to larger soybean and wheat plantings.
Farmers will sow some 94 million acres of corn this year - enough to grow the first 14 billion bushel crop, USDA projected.
The plantings would be up 2 million acres from last year. The extra supplies will help boost corn stocks, along with a slowing in the demand for ethanol.
“Slowing demand for ethanol means corn stocks will likely increase in 2012, assuming a return to trend yields,” Glauber said.
Glauber said the farm community’s “debt picture still continues to be quite, quite good” following a spike in land prices.
US agriculture exports are expected to fall $1bn to $131bn this year, but it will still be the second-highest on record.