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Some farmers are spending money these days, though, making them attractive to farm-equipment makers and some less-traditional companies. "There's people here from all over the world; they didn't come here on food stamps," Kirbach said, looking around as a sea of farmers and their wives and children walked up and down paved lanes at the trade show that alternates each year between Illinois and Iowa. That's why Ben Eyster, an all-terrain vehicle dealer for Yamaha, made his first trip to the show this year. Farmers, he said, make up about 40 percent of the business at his shop in Washington, near Peoria. They opened their wallets wide earlier this year, he said. Eyster's January-to-June sales were up 130 percent over the same period in 2010. But then sales just stopped. "And what killed it was that government budget fiasco," he said, referring to the summer's squabbles over the federal government's budget. "People lost confidence." That's the same unease Kirbach talked about. High prices for corn and soybeans helped drive up the cost of food bought by people dealing with tough economic times, he said. "I'm concerned about the guy that's working at McDonald's," he said. "He works 25 hours a week and has three kids. Where are those people going to be?"
[Associated
Press;
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