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Views and opinons: Talkin’ about my generation; what about yours?

 

It’s a truism in American agriculture that food-growing technology undergoes an industry-shaking metamorphosis every generation. When Grandpa (both yours and mine) farmed, hybrid seed corn came in and oat-eating horsepower went out. His sons, our fathers, were early adopters of anhydrous ammonia, 2,4-D, and, whoa, combines.

Twenty-five years later, our generational farm-changing moment arrived with genetically modified seed. It revolutionized farming as chromosomes replaced cultivators and seed, soil, and marketing consultants became as important as customers.

Today’s farming generation is in another metamorphosis now; it’s changing from carbon-based power to silicon-based intelligence. Computers acquire, analyze, and deliver more data to manage farm machines – not farm people – now, in one hour, than NASA had to send its hired men to the moon and back in a week.

What will follow this generation of ag geeks?

If American agriculture remains on the same, well-trodden path, farming in 2040 will feature more technology, more production, and far fewer – maybe only a handful of – people. At least that’s what facts imply.

For example, in 1900, The USDA counted 5.7 million farmers nationwide. If you add in hired farm labor, 29.4 million Americans – or an astonishing 38 percent of the nation’s total workforce – sweated on farms back then.

Today, according to the 2017 U.S. Ag Census, 3.4 million Americans claim to be “farmers,” and yet more than 1 million are over age 65, nearly another million are between the ages of 55-65 and, in fact, just 80,000 of them, or only 4 percent of the total, deliver two-thirds of all farm production.

That dramatic drop in less than five generations shows the unimaginable power and culture-changing impact of technology on farming and rural America.

It also proves true what every ag student had hammered into their brain by every ag instructor since 1950: Replace labor with capital every chance you get. Fifty years ago that meant replacing hired labor with ever-better machinery. Today it means replacing almost all labor with ever-better computing power.

And, boy, are we. In 1950, the United States still had 5 million farmers. Today, almost every full-time farmer in America would find a seat in Iowa’s three largest football stadiums on any given Saturday.

That trend shows few signs of reversing and, in fact, several signs of increasing. Today’s dairy sector offers an example even as it endures a crushing, three years-long shakeout. In 1970, America had 12 million dairy cows on 650,000 dairy farms; in 2017, there were 9.4 million dairy cows and just 40,200 dairy farms.

That change is better dramatized in herd size: A generation ago, the average dairy farm milked 80 cows; today, the average dairy herd is 900 cows.

Growing just as fast is the adoption of robotic milking machines. Dairying is the near-perfect farm enterprise for machinery (capital) to replace people (labor) because milking a cow is simple, repetitive, and requires little decision-making. Moreover, robots never need a day off and can be reprogrammed whenever conditions change. As a result, worldwide sales of robotic milking machines will top $1.2 billion this year. Sales are estimated to double to $2.5 billion in just five years.

That’s not a trend; it’s a tidal wave. And it’s not just in dairying.

Consider this: If the U.S. Postal Service can send driverless semi-trailer trucks of mail from Phoenix to Dallas and back, as it began to do on May 21, someone will soon figure out how to turn a driverless tractor around at the end of a cornfield.

And when that is commonplace – surely within the next 25 years – U.S. farms, and rural America too, will be enormously different than today. Be that good or bad, one thing is certain: That generation, like my generation, won’t be ready for it.

 

The views and opinions expressed in this column are those of the author and not necessarily those of Farm World. Readers with questions or comments for Alan Guebert may write to him in care of this publication.


 

5/31/2019