Comparing cash rent surveys: NASS versus land grant numbers

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Unprecedented profitability in grain farming in the United States has led to an escalation in cash rental rates. Landowners and farmers have found it increasingly hard to agree on an equitable cash rent as crop prices and input costs have experienced significant volatility over the last several years.

Cash lease rates aren’t public knowledge and don’t have a public clearinghouse such as a futures exchange which means information on rates is often sketchy. Farmers with full yield and profit information are often reluctant to share this information with the landowner for fear of rent escalation.

Landowners who know there is a significant value in “fringe benefits” that farmers provide (snow clearing, rock removal, fence-row maintenance, tiling) may be reluctant to recognize this value in the negotiation process.

Word of mouth

Conversations often go like this: Farmer: “I’m only paying $125 per acre for a similar farm.”

Or a land owner might say: “My neighbor is getting $200 per acre for land that isn’t near the quality of mine.” These are often part of the discourse as landowners and tenant farmers negotiate for an equitable lease amount.

Rent surveys are conducted by NASS and many land grant universities in an attempt to provide decision-makers baseline data. NASS has conducted surveys since 2008, surveying farmers regarding cash rental rates they presently pay on farms they rent.
These survey data are summarized and published as an average cash rent by county at www.nass.usda.gov.

Surveys

Many land grant universities conduct land rental surveys by surveying professionals serving the agricultural industry by asking them their opinion of the level of cash rental rates and land values. These professionals include ag lenders, rural appraisers, farm managers and extension professionals.

These survey data are summarized and published as averages by land production class and by region.

Survey results typically yield lower rents than land grant university survey results for average land production class. Two issues likely drive the differences in these survey results. First, survey questions from the two separate surveys are not the same.

NASS cash rent surveys ask respondents to report the total cash rent paid and total acreage of cash rented land. Land grant surveys ask respondents to indicate average cash rents for each land production class for recently rented parcels.

Differences

This difference may lead land grant survey respondents to return results indicative of marginal cash rents as they are asked to provide data for recently rented parcels.

The NASS survey effort does not stipulate the returned information be from recently rented parcels and may reflect lower rental rates from long-standing rental agreements and/or non-arms-length rental agreements.

The second difference between these surveys is they survey different populations. The NASS cash rent survey effort surveys farmers while most land grant universities survey ag professionals.

Although these survey efforts often do yield different results, both sources of data can be useful.

 

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(Barry Ward is the leader of production business management in the Ohio State University Extension’s department of agricultural, environmental and development economics.)

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