Thirty-one Missouri counties are among almost 600 counties
across the U.S. that have been designated by the USDA as primary natural
disaster areas due to drought and heat. Farm operators in these counties are
eligible for low-interest emergency loans from USDA.
Whether to take advantage of those loans is an important
decision for many farmers in those counties, especially livestock producers,
according to Ron Plain, a University of Missouri Extension agricultural
economist.
Hot, dry conditions last year sharply reduced crop,
pasture and hay production, leading to very high feed costs, Plain said. “For a
lot of producers, this designation gives them the opportunity to get some
low-interest financing so they can carry their herds through the winter.”
Currently, the interest rate on these emergency loans is
2.15 percent. Producers need to remember that it is a loan and put it into an
investment that will generate revenue, Plain said.
“Low-interest-rate loans can be very appealing, but
farmers need to have a plan on what they will do with that money,” he said. “It
needs to be something that will generate income so they can repay the loan.
That loan needs to work for you to help cut costs or improve efficiency,
otherwise borrowing that money is not going to make you better off.”
Plain says buying feed to maintain cattle herds would be
a good decision, as cattle prices are likely to be at record highs again in
2013. For crop producers, putting in an irrigation system can be a very
valuable long-term investment.
“One of the things to keep in mind is that debt is a
risk,” Plain said. “The more debt you have the greater risk your farm is in. So
farmers who can keep their debt load low and can get by without borrowing, even
in difficult times like this, are in stronger financial position for the
future.”
To learn more about low-rate emergency loans, contact
your local
Farm Service Agency office or visit www.fsa.usda.gov.
For drought-related information from MU Extension, click here.
(by Jason Vance, MU Senior Information Specialist)
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