—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 6,1971 18 Labor Real Estate Mechanical power unery Fertilizer and Lime Feed, Seed and Livestock purchase Taxes and interest Other Farm Productivity Levels The rate of output per unit of input has remained about the same since 1963. However, this could change quickly with the introduction of new technology to come. When an industry has been showing gains in productivity for a number of years, statistics that indicate otherwise will raise some eyebrows ... and a lot of questions. Both reactions are stirred by the recent trend in U.S agriculture’s productivity. After heading upward for more than a decade, the productivity index in the early 1960’s began to lose thrust. For the sixties as a whole, the gain was small by comparison to the phenomenal rises during most of the forties and fifties The productivity index measures total agricultural output per unit of all inputs used in production or charged to the farming industry. When output and input advance at the same rate, the index stands still. In many years during the 1960’s the productivity index did go up reaching record peaks twice. However, a review of the decade’s performance showed productivity rose by only 3 percent, versus 26 percent in 1950-60 and 18 percent in 1940-50. Production itself went up over 13 percent in the decade of the 1960’5.50, the lack of buoyancy in the productivity index suggests no immediate threat to our capacity to produce farm products Actually, total output could jump sharply and quickly by increasing the acreage in crops. In 1970, farmers used 336 million acres for crops, 50 million fewer than in 1949. Most of the 50 million acres went into govern ment diversion programs. Much of this land could quickly return to production at little added cost. Also, the Nation has a quarter billion acres of land in uses other than crops that is considered suitable for cultivation. If there were the economic incentives to do so, a large part of this acreage could also be brought into; production. Is the letup in productivity gains only temporary? No one knows for sure. But a similar question might have been asked back in the late 1940’5, when the productivity index showed the same sluggishness as in the last Penn Manor Play Set Penn Manor High School and the Senior Classs are presenting the play “Up The Down Stair case” at 8 p.m. November 19 and 20 in the High School Auditorium in Millersville. Admission is $1 for adults and 50 cents for students. The Chantint Mix of Farm Inputs* half of the 1960’5. The index resumed its skyward course around 1952. Generally, technological developments spark productivity increases. Major ones—like the transition from horses to trac tors, and from open-pollenated to hybrid com—have repercussions lasting for decades. The 1960’s did not usher in major scientific breakthroughs for agriculture, although there continued a steady stream of improved farming method. These acted to buttress the index. However, in any one year, un favorable weather or disease infestation may cause produc tivity to sag. Such was the case in 1970, when drought in part of the Com Belt and Southern com leaf blight in much of the rest of that region resulted in a 2-percent decline in the index. There are several explanations for the slowdown in the 1960’s that have to do with certain struc tural changes spurred by the new technology. One explanation related to economies of scale. As the size of a farm operation increases, at first the costs per unit of output go down. At some 1970 , labor on U S farms has dropped sharply lut te of decline has been tapenni in recent years, is the volume of most inputs boufht from the o economy has been nsiny steadily Total input lout as fast as total output, thus th* productivity which measures output per unit of input 4 to level off in 1953-70 croups as percents of all inputs In the process of growth, many farms became of such size that output per unit of input did not increase as fast as it had when these farms first began to employ modern machinery, hybrid seeds, fertilizers, pesticies, etc. Some farms in the 1960’s had approached the point of least-cost production. Other farms kept on growing past the point of least-cost production. By producing more units they were able to take a lower profit per unit and still have a larger total income. These farms tended to hold down the 1955 point, the least-cost level of production is reached. This level varies by type of farm, and with the technology available to farmers at any one point in time. Obviously, it takes a bigger field or a bigger hen house to efficiently use modern equip ment. With the advent of sophisticated machinery—four and six-row equipment and the rest—farmers expanded. Since World War 11, the average farm size has grown from 195 acres to about 390. Meanwhile, numbers of farms were cut by more than half to around 2.9 million. Index (1940 = 100) 170 •* 100 Cu 1940 USDA Analyzes Wh average increase in the scale with present technology, th< productivity index of all farms, point of least-cost productioi Even though many farms have could shift again wit) achieved maximum economies of technological break-throughs Wenger Implement, Inc. Landis Bros. Inc. The Buck 284-4141 Lancaster 393-390 C Productivity; The 30-year Record Total Output Total Input o* 1950 LANCO BEDDING FOR POULTRY AND LIVESTOCK Shavings Bagged, Bulk, Blown-in. Call for information Phone 285-4506 John Deere 38 Forage Harvester is unmatched... any way you size it up Add up the facts that corn attachments have exclusive rubber gathering belts for plug-free feeding; that changing crop attachments is the fastest and easiest around; that the cylinder cutterhead boasts 6 spiraled knives; that there's a built-in knife sharpener; that re-cutter screens are available, and you'll see why it's unmatched. See us soon. Credit's available. Shotzberger's Elm ’ 665-2141 M. S. Yearsley & Sons West Chester 696-2990 .•C-' Productivity (Output per Unit of Input) ' ,-ar 's_ . ‘ 1960 Notice! JDCP Finance charges waived on for age harvesters with com heads until Sept. 1, 1972. 1970