Investor Jim Rogers and Glenn Beck earlier today discussed the global decline in the number of people interested in pursuing farming as a professional career.
“Nobody wants to [farm],” Beck said, referring to an earlier conversation he had with Rogers. “And it’s not just here — it’s around the entire world. Farming has become a lost art.”
“The average age of farmers in America is 58,” Rogers noted. “In Japan, it’s 66. In Canada, it’s the oldest in recorded history. In Australia, it’s 58. In 10 years, those guys will be 68 (if they’re still alive). Somebody has got to go into the fields.”
“More people in America study public relations than study agriculture,” he added. “We don’t have any farmers coming up.” [Below at about the 9-minute mark]
However, despite this apparent disinterest in agriculture, and despite the drought that’s still eating away at the industry’s profits, something remarkable is happening right now in the value of U.S. cropland, according to bankers surveyed in the latest report from the Kansas City Fed.
“Farm income and land values were boosted by high crop prices and high crop insurance payments. In North and South Dakota, land lease revenue increased thanks to the region’s energy deposits,” Business Insider notes.
“Bankers in the Corn Belt and Central Plains reported strong annual increases. Meanwhile in Texas, where growing conditions were poor, farmland values increased a modest 2.6 percent year-over-year,” the report adds.
And that’s not all: For the remainder of FY2013, analysts expect farmland values to grow — and grow some more.
Here’s a chart illustrating the increase in non-irrigated cropland in Q3:
If this trend continues, as analyst Jesse Colombo notes, these agricultural areas may very well become “New Manhattans” (as far as wealth is concerned).
“Farming is going to be one of the great professions of the next 10-20 years,” Jim Rogers told Beck.
“When I speak to universities and students, I tell them they should all be studying agriculture. They don’t want to do it. They all want to get MBAs. But it’s a terrible mistake. They should be studying agriculture,” he added.
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Featured image courtesy Getty Images. This post has been updated.




















































































































Comments (178)
FloridaFarmGirl
Feb. 14, 2013 at 8:30amWow, seems like a lot of haters out there. That’s all right though, we farmers will be doing great and eating well when you haters are starving. Y’all take care out there.
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freedomcatcher
Feb. 14, 2013 at 8:19amFarmland ! The next bubble to burst !
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Bret4207
Feb. 14, 2013 at 8:17amI am a farmer. I don’t buy this idea no one wants to get into farming. I know a lot of people that would love to be farming.What’s stopping them is that you can’t get into farming without a big bankroll or inheriting a farm.
This is another article making suppositions based on a lack of knowledge. I expect better from The Blaze.
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RonniiRaygun
Feb. 14, 2013 at 8:00amI married a hot momma from ND from a farming family in the Red River Valley. When we got married we could have bought a farmstead and 250 acres with all the equipment from a retiring farmer for $150K. That would equate to $600 an acre if you only talk about the land. Today that land is $5000 /acre in the Red River Valley.
In regards to the age of the farmers I think that has to do more with living longer. I see plenty of men in their 20′s-30′s working for farmers. They don’t own the farm but they are farming. A lot of the farms I see are also being run more like small corporations or co-ops.
I’m an engineer but it I gave it all up I would enjoy farming but my brother in law is taking that job over.
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GravityGuy
Feb. 14, 2013 at 7:56amIt’s not remarkable at all… it is rediculous. With farm ground selling here in Iowa at about $15,000 an acre, it is to the point that no one can become a farmer any more. Big farmers and corporations are simply getting bigger as they buy up the farms that become available.
It used to be that you could live on a 40 acre farm. Now you need at least 300 acres to be able to turn a decent profit. Can you buy 300 acres at $15,000 an acre? I can’t. There are many farmers in Iowa with 1500 plus acres… I know several with over 4000 acres. There is a lot of value in the land, but it is pretty hard to find a buyer with pockets that deep and if you can’t protect your land from the death tax, your kids are screwed.
Anyone who can afford to start up as a farmer here might as well take their money and retire early. Only millionaires can buy the ground, equipment, seed, fertilizer and pesticides that it takes to turn a profit.
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obfuscatenot
Feb. 14, 2013 at 7:29amIf the “New Manhattans” become rural farming areas……and you are smart enough to deal with the massive estate taxes-generation to generation….think about how much the community organizers like the wealthy……think about what happened in Russia…..history is repeating itself…..Pray.
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slipsinker
Feb. 14, 2013 at 7:26amWhat kind of farmer? The one who raises round-up ready field corn and soybeans? Who could do that now? Profit margins are so narrow you had better make sure it rains! Raise produce? You don’t need as much land. Trouble with that is everybody and his brother will do that and the market will get flooded. Then you’ll have lots of expenses and nowhere to sell your vegetables. You’ll be competing against megacompanies who pay illegals nothing to harvest produce. Good luck farming! Buy an acre or two and raise your own garden. Pick a spot that’s well drained and gets plenty of sunshine. Make sure you can get water to it for dry periods. Use plastic mulch and drip tape as much as possible. Have twice as much land as you need for your garden. Put half of the garden in vegetables and the other half in white clover. Fertilize the cover crop half with potash and phosphorous every year so you’ll have at least 1 year of fertilizer ahead in case of the stupid politicians that we elect. The clover will give you nitrogen and organic material which your crops will love. Buy extra hybrid seeds every year as well. Open pollinated are ok but the hybrids have great disease packages and can be stored in a freezere for a year or to and will still grow. Disease is a problem. Good luck.
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JoeSix-Pack
Feb. 14, 2013 at 7:15amFarming is HARD WORK!! I can see why so many do not take it up. But we need them so much. God bless all who do that vital work for all of us.
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LOTO
Feb. 14, 2013 at 6:57amFarm land is going up because corporations are buying it for the CRP money. It pays better than bank interest. Check out your senator and politicians “corporations” crp payments here.
http://farm.ewg.org/search.php
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ObserverOnTheHill
Feb. 14, 2013 at 6:34amHenry Kissinger declared in the 1970’s,
‘If you control the oil you control the country; if you control food, you control the population.
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Joyzee
Feb. 14, 2013 at 6:27amAnother reason to buy Food Storage!
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pwatkins
Feb. 14, 2013 at 4:27amWhen Obama hears the word farm he thinks we are talking about wind. Now if you say vegetables he can tell you all about Michele’s garden on the White House lawn. Store your own food because I don’t believe he and his wife have in mind to distribute any food from the land we pay them to farm on.
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Meggars53
Feb. 14, 2013 at 4:18amI grew up on a farm in the ’60′s and ’70′s. Watching the struggle each year, the worries we went through, such as, will there be a harvest or will the crop ‘burn’ because of lack of rain. You never knew from year to year.
The farmer is the only producer of a product in this country that can’t name his price for his product. Its controlled by the CO-OP. Back then a tractor cost nearly $20,000 to do the work necessary but a bushel of corn was around a $1. When harvest time net 45 bushels an acres, its going to take a lot of acres just to pay for the fuel, let alone the tractor or seed for the next year.
Farming is an all day job, from first light to well past sundown, six and seven days a week. Its back breaking work and when winter rolls around, well the livestock NEVER take the winter off, and you end up in the machine shed with your tractor taken apart hanging on chain falls so you can replace failed hydraulic hoses, replace internals on the combine so its ready for wheat harvest, repair rebuild the planter, the disk, the plow and the baler. There is never a vacation and very few days off.
Paul Harvey was correct when he said God needed someone to take care of the world, so He created the farmer. Backbone of America.
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liltexasgal
Feb. 14, 2013 at 2:59amI bought a small farm 6 years ago so that I could be a help to my family and others in the event of a food crisis. It’s good to know that it might pay off in more ways than one.
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Old_Warrior
Feb. 14, 2013 at 1:20amTwo decades ago, I looked into buying a farm. I’m not some uneducated guy who relies on college to learn farming. My dad was a farmer for 40 years before I was even born. He taught me how to grow pretty much anything, and raise animals that matter. Like cows, pigs, horses, ox, chickens and the such. I love chikens. Best food producing animal ever. Eggs just about every day, and meat on the stove when it gets too old to lay anymore eggs. Etc.
I couldn’t buy a farm. I couldn’t raise what I wanted to raise. I couldn’t grow what I wanted to grow. The Department of Agriculture mapped out my entire future, and wanted to charge me big bucks for the trouble. Oh, and if I play ball, I can get a ‘subsidy’ to offset the taxes and regulation fees, which means I price any product at a rate that I’m dictated too.
I knew America was gone back then. Farming? No. It’s not farming. It’s a tyranny. They burn small farmers, they extort large farmers, who would be buried and have their permits yanked, and their aniamls confiscated the moment they ‘tried’ breaking free from Government Control. They’re not farmers anymore. They’re unwilling servants to brutal masters who call themselves the government.
A decade ago, I took another peek to see if matters were better. They were a thousand percent worse. I couldn’t farm even if the land and ranch was given free. The regs and permits are just way too much, people.
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wylddredhead
Feb. 14, 2013 at 12:38amI would love to learn how to farm… I just dont have the resources or the knowledge.
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liltexasgal
Feb. 14, 2013 at 3:02amIt is hard work, but not that difficult to figure out. You can educate yourself. There are lots of ways to learn about farming on the internet. Do your own homework and give it a go. Of course, don’t expect to turn a profit right away. Like any other business it takes alot of work, dedication, and failures to grow.
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nw5052001
Feb. 14, 2013 at 12:24amwhat are we going to eat?
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Chancellor
Feb. 14, 2013 at 12:21amWhen they finally break all the small and independant farmers they will control most of the people with food.
Those that remember they’re youth and worked the farms will be able to survive. And Like I told my wife
“The first idiot that comes to my property saying he’s from the Government and I can’t grow that food without his ok a License or whatever…….I shoot!
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sweetieboat
Feb. 14, 2013 at 12:19amThe Amish and Mennonites farm in almost every state in this country and they do not take any money from the government that I know of. My brother in law owns 160 acres and he raises chickens and some soy beans. Not a big enough farm to be on the governments list for subsidies. He makes a nice living for his family and he works very hard for that money.
For all of you who are so willing to cut farmers down; you need to know there are many farms like this one.
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GoodStuff
Feb. 14, 2013 at 12:08amThis article doesn’t mention the most obvious reason people don’t get into farming…it’s extremely difficult for family farms to make money when they have to compete against the Big Agra corporations that have bottomless pockets.
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Chancellor
Feb. 14, 2013 at 12:22amand POISON in they’re food!
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sparkyrules
Feb. 14, 2013 at 12:05amAn couple acres of land with Northern 4 seasons,a cabin, a stream/river nearby,lots of canning jars, a root cellar,And a shotgun.
Who could ask for more?
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tmbell87
Feb. 13, 2013 at 11:44pmCouple reasons why the young aren’t breaking into farming. 1. Even if the family farm is paid off and the next generation wants to stay in the same business as their parents, the estate tax still applies. Farmland and equipment can be in the millions of dollars so there is no way they can pay that back. 2. Sometimes the farmer’s children don’t want the family farm and when the property is passed down, they sell.
Personally, I am 25 years old and I would love to have a bit of land to farm. Though my aspirations would be for hobby farming and not commercial. So I guess farming isn’t so appropriate in my case because I just want to be as self-sustaining as possible.
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dontcensorme
Feb. 13, 2013 at 11:27pmChina is buying all the crop land and shipping the food to China, meanwhile Obama should be giving free Chinese language classes for the rest of us to be slaves.
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independentvoteril
Feb. 13, 2013 at 10:48pmcouldn’t afford a farm but 8 years ago bought an acre of land with a house on it.. last year I grew 400 lbs of tomatoes alone,.,. this after being born and raised in Chicago.. KIDS don’t know what they are missing.. farmers aren’t isolated anymore it’s a great way to live..
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sparkyrules
Feb. 14, 2013 at 12:07amYou know it.
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lassiegirldawn
Feb. 13, 2013 at 10:39pmAgenda 21 and Monsanto are the reasons farming has taken a hit. Monsanto has bought up farm land to grow their own GMOed crops. Agenda 21 believes that people should not own land and that people are hurting the earth. The future of farming has been designed to fail for the small farmer as with the small business owners. The government does not want people to have un-GMOed food and is trying to stop farming as we have known it.
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soybomb315_II
Feb. 13, 2013 at 10:51pmi dont know how glenn can be against Agenda 21 but at the same time make fun of the people who talk about Monsanto and GMO….
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