34    March 26, 2015     2015 Logan County Farm Outlook Magazine   Lincoln Daily News.com
        
        
          RENT:
        
        
          CASH
        
        
          The Great Equalizer
        
        
          
            Did you know?
          
        
        
          Logan County consists of 363,272 total farmland
        
        
          acres.  Of those, 183,961 acres are managed through
        
        
          a landlord/tenant agreement.  The majority of those
        
        
          agreements are cash rent agreements.
        
        
          Logan County at 50.6 percent has the highest
        
        
          percentage of rented farmland in the United States.
        
        
          How did that happen?  One word….Scully.
        
        
          While Logan County owes a great deal to the Scully
        
        
          family in that they converted thousands of acres
        
        
          of swampland into productive agricultural soil, the
        
        
          Scully’s also became land barons.  As such, even
        
        
          today the potential for young farmers to become land
        
        
          owners is slimmer here than anywhere in the United
        
        
          States; rented ground is going to be for many, the
        
        
          primary, means of being able to farm for a living.
        
        
          But, the big question is can young farmers earn a
        
        
          living in Logan County?
        
        
          
            Doing the math
          
        
        
          In the LDN fall farm magazine article,
        
        
          “Will corn producers make money this year?” http://
        
        
          archives.lincolndailynews.com/reference/farm_
        
        
          outlook/2014%20Fall/index.html#18/z
        
        
          University of Illinois figures projected the
        
        
          profitability of the fall corn crop -- the price per
        
        
          bushel, a state-wide estimation of yields and it utilized
        
        
          a state average for land costs. Since the February
        
        
          release of the National Ag Statistics Office showing
        
        
          that the 2014 corn and soybean yields came in higher
        
        
          than the state projection, but grain prices fell, that
        
        
          potential profit picture has dimmed.
        
        
          Some local farmers are reporting farm-wide losses of
        
        
          least $15 an acre in 2014.  In addition, there are farms
        
        
          locally that had the potential of losing nearly $100/
        
        
          acre.
        
        
          
            Is there a solution?
          
        
        
          What can be done to help keep the Logan County
        
        
          farmer stay afloat?  The first obvious wish would be
        
        
          for high yields AND high prices. That is the great
        
        
          American farmer pipe dream, and most everyone will
        
        
          tell you that is never going to happen.
        
        
          The next step then may be to look at the variables that
        
        
          can be controlled.  Is cash rent one of those variables?
        
        
          To start, recall that $308 is an average per acre rent
        
        
          with some rents lower, some higher.  Speaking with
        
        
          one landlady recently, she rents her 100 acres of
        
        
          tillable farmland for $400.00 an acre.  That is an
        
        
          annual income of $40,000.  But that is her principal
        
        
          income.  From that she is responsible for the property
        
        
          tax, some property maintenance such as ditches,
        
        
          culverts and roads, and she has to pay income tax on
        
        
          the gross.  Can she afford to take less in cash rent?
        
        
          Possibly not.
        
        
          Continued to page 36