 
          
            2013 LOGAN COUNTY FARM OUTLOOK MAGAZINE      LINCOLN DAILY NEWS.com       October 25, 2013     Page 47
          
        
        
          basically means that every
        
        
          employee could be a part-timer,
        
        
          but if there are enough of them
        
        
          that the hours they work equal
        
        
          50 full-time employees, then that
        
        
          farm will have to comply with
        
        
          health care mandates.
        
        
          What may change, though, is the
        
        
          ability of the producer to afford
        
        
          health insurance for himself
        
        
          and his family. While Klemm
        
        
          said he has yet to see anything
        
        
          concrete on what the insurance
        
        
          rates are through the Illinois
        
        
          Health Insurance Marketplace,
        
        
          the idea behind the health care
        
        
          law is to make private ownership
        
        
          of health policies affordable for
        
        
          everyone.
        
        
          On the family farm, up until
        
        
          now, many times a spouse
        
        
          will go to work for a firm
        
        
          or company that can offer
        
        
          affordable insurance through a
        
        
          payroll deduction group plan.
        
        
          These changes could mean that
        
        
          the spouse could have the option
        
        
          of staying on the farm and
        
        
          becoming a more integral part of
        
        
          the operation.
        
        
          Klemm said producers in the
        
        
          higher income brackets will
        
        
          have some new taxes to deal
        
        
          with effective Jan. 1, 2014. One
        
        
          will be a 0.9 percent additional
        
        
          Medicare tax, and another is
        
        
          an increase in the tax on net
        
        
          investment income.
        
        
          Klemm said the tax on net
        
        
          investment income is for the
        
        
          very high-income brackets. It
        
        
          won’t affect a large number of
        
        
          farmers, but the real concern
        
        
          might be for those who are
        
        
          entering retirement and see
        
        
          lower input costs in the last year
        
        
          or two, greater income due to
        
        
          the sale of equipment no longer
        
        
          needed, and even land sales.
        
        
          Klemm said those who are
        
        
          looking at retirement down the
        
        
          road in a few years should be
        
        
          looking at this now, evaluating
        
        
          what they have and how they
        
        
          will manage their exit from
        
        
          farming.
        
        
          How the farmer addresses
        
        
          this, Klemm said, is going to
        
        
          be a personal decision. There
        
        
          are options to begin prior to
        
        
          retirement to spread out the
        
        
          income. He said that in the
        
        
          later years of life, one thing
        
        
          that changes could be that the
        
        
          on-the-farm debt falls, leaving
        
        
          more cash on hand. Instead of
        
        
          pocketing that profit and paying
        
        
          the taxes on all of it, an option
        
        
          could be to invest a portion of
        
        
          the profit in a retirement plan
        
        
          for future use and future tax
        
        
          obligations.
        
        
          So, in the end, does Klemm
        
        
          have a crystal ball? Can he tell
        
        
          you what to do to be profitable?
        
        
          Can he tell you how to prepare
        
        
          for every contingency that may
        
        
          come along?
        
        
          No, he doesn’t have a one-size-
        
        
          fits-all system to help make a
        
        
          farmer profitable, but he does
        
        
          know this:
        
        
          “Things are going to change. I
        
        
          don’t know what the changes
        
        
          will be, but I know they will
        
        
          come. You have to be willing to
        
        
          look at the options and evaluate
        
        
          how they could fit into your
        
        
          operation,” he said.
        
        
          “Does that mean you have to
        
        
          change? Not necessarily, but
        
        
          you have to be able to maintain
        
        
          the competitive edge. And that
        
        
          is where it goes back to the
        
        
          necessity of evaluating those
        
        
          records, looking at your true net
        
        
          positions and what your true net
        
        
          income is.”