According to data released this week by the United States
Courts, family farmers filed 595 Chapter 12 bankruptcies in
2019, up from 498 filings a year earlier. The data also shows
that such filings - known as "family farmer" bankruptcies - have
steadily increased every year for the past five years.
Farmers across the nation also have retired or sold their farms
because of the financial strains, changing the face of
Midwestern towns and concentrating the business in fewer hands.
"I just had a farmer contact me last week, telling me he can't
get financing for his inputs this year and he doesn't know what
to do," said Charles E. Covey, a bankruptcy attorney based in
Peoria, Illinois.
Chapter 12 is a part of the federal bankruptcy code that is
designed for family farmers and fishermen to restructure their
debts. It was created during the 1980s farm crisis as a simple
court procedure to let family farmers keep operating while
working out a plan to repay lenders.
The increase in cases had been somewhat expected, bankruptcy
experts and agricultural economists said, as farmers face trade
battles, ever-mounting farm debt, prolonged low commodity
prices, volatile weather patterns and a fatal pig disease that
has decimated China's herd.
Even billions of dollars spent over the past two years in
government agricultural assistance has not stemmed the bleeding.
Nearly one-third of projected U.S. net farm income in 2019 came
from government aid and taxpayer-subsidized commodity insurance
payments, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
The court data indicates those supports did help prevent a more
serious economic fallout, said John Newton, chief economist for
the American Farm Bureau Federation.
Some of the biggest bankruptcy rate increases were seen in
regions, such as apple growers in the Pacific Northwest, that
did not receive much or any of the latest round of trade aid
from the Trump administration.
The bankruptcy data "signals that things have not turned
around," said John Newton, chief economist for the American Farm
Bureau Federation. "We still have supply and demand uncertainty.
If we see prolonged low prices, I wouldn't expect this trend to
slow down."
(Reporting By P.J. Huffstutter; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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