Canadian farm cash receipts are on track to decline in 2024, potentially the first such downturn in 15 years.
In a farm income report last month, Statistics Canada reported that national farm cash receipts totalled $70.6 billion through the first three quarters of 2024, down $2.2 billion or 3% from the same period in 2023. Livestock receipts in the January-September period were up 6.3% to $29 billion, but that was more than offset by a 9.2% fall in crop returns to $37.6 billion and a 1.3% decline in program payments to $4 billion.
The final and full farm income numbers for 2024 will not be in until early in 2025, but Farm Credit Canada (FCC) is projecting total farm cash receipts will indeed be down on the year. If accurate, FCC’s forecasted decline in 2023 farm cash receipts would be the first since 2009, when they dropped 3.2% to $44.5 billion.
In that year, lower program payments were the primary culprit, falling almost $1 billion or 20.3% from a year earlier. Livestock receipts also declined, down 4.5% to $18.05 billion, but crop receipts managed a fractional increase to $23.2 billion. Total farm cash receipts were marginally lower again in 2010, easing 0.2%, but rebounded in 2011 with a 12.2% increase to $49.8 billion – led by a 16.3% jump in crop returns to just over $26 billion.