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So what do current conditions mean for today's farmers? Some experts say farmers are much
less leveraged. And as fate would have it, agriculture helped lead the nation back from
the economic abyss during the latest recovery as farm exports, commodity prices and net
farm income all soared to record highs. Rural land values also have climbed to unprecedented
levels in recent years, fueling talk of bubbles and prompting some to wonder if history will
repeat itself. Neil Harl: We don't know whether it may occur
in 2020, 2030, 2040 or earlier. But it's likely to happen again when people forget the lessons
learned in the 1980s. Now, right now, agriculture is doing very well. But I do urge everyone
in the agriculture sector to think twice and to run in their business plans a worst case
scenario, not just a best case scenario. Kristin Hagedorn: And I think that particularly
when you're dealing with situations like this it isn't just somebody losing their job or
losing a business, this was a whole, it was whole families that were involved and it was,
you know, generations of families that were involved. And I think that's important not
to lose sight of. Mark Pearson: You can't borrow your way to
prosperity. The markets are going to change. And you have to be diversified. You have to
be able to have, you have to have cash but you need to keep debt low and not high and
not overleveraged and I think that has been the big lesson of the 1980s. What we need
to have on an ongoing basis is an ability to compete in the world. If you give the American
farmer the chance to compete in the world he'll take on everybody.
Farming is cyclical and often unpredictable. Ask any farmer, big or small, about their
job and they will talk of flooding and drought, rising costs and fickle markets. Yet most
farmers love what they do. For them, agriculture is a virtuous gamble where the odds of a bountiful
harvest get better the harder they work. 2013 - My farm was saved during the farm crisis
of the 1980s because of the support of my parents and my own commitment to keeping it
in the family. Ironically, the farm had become the property of my family during the Great
Depression of the 1930s. My grandfather loaned money to the buyer of the farm. But when the
man was unable to repay his loans he was forced to relinquish the land to my grandfather.
In 1936 he and my grandmother gave the farm to my folks as a wedding present. The farm
is now debt free and in a trust for my three children, the third generation of the family
to own it.