Solvency is a measure of the farm’s overall financial strength and risk-taking ability. The average net worth of the 2,159 farms at the end of 2021 was $3,745,893, up from $3,258,983 the year before. Average farm and non-farm incomes in 2021 were well above family living requirements, thus enabling net worth increases. Hog farms had the highest net worth, followed by grain farms, with dairy farms recording the lowest. The debt-to-farm equity and debt-to-farm asset indicators show how debt capital is combined with equity capital. This is useful in looking at the risk exposure of the business. The average debt-to-farm asset percentage for all farms was 19.3. The debt-to-farm asset percentage ranged from 19.1 for grain farms to 33.3 for hog farms. The average debt-to-farm asset level of 18.2 from 2012 was at its lowest level for at least 20 years.
A measure of a farm’s profitability is useful in examining its ability to meet family living demands and retire term debt. It is also useful in measuring the farm’s ability to utilize assets and equity to generate income. The average return on farm assets for the 2,159 farms was 7.8 percent, up from 4.3 percent a year earlier. Hog farms recorded the highest returns, averaging 9.8 percent, while dairy farms recorded the lowest, averaging 1.1 percent. Return on farm equity in 2021 ranged from 13.2 percent for hog farms to 1.0 percent for dairy farms. The average was 9.3 percent, up from 4.5 percent in 2020.
The interest, operating, and depreciation expense ratios relate these various expense categories as a percentage of the value of farm production. The farm operating income ratio measures the return to labor, capital, and management as a percentage of the value of farm production. These measures can be used to evaluate the financial efficiency of the farm business. The interest–expense ratio averaged 1.9 percent for the 2,159 farms, ranging from 1.9 percent for grain farms to 5.4 percent for beef farms. The 1.9 percent was down from 2.9 percent in 2020. The 2021 figure of 1.9 percent was tied with 2012 being the lowest since at least 1995. The farm operating income ratio ranged from a high of 34.0 percent for grain farms to 23.0 percent for dairy farms. The average for all farms in 2021 was 33.6 percent, up from 22.7 percent in 2020. The 2017 through 2021 5-year average farm operating income ratio is 17.5 percent. The 2021 farm operating income ratio was well above the 5-year average.
The author would like to acknowledge that data used in this study comes from the Illinois Farm Business Farm Management (FBFM) Association. Without Illinois FBFM, information as comprehensive and accurate as this would not be available for educational purposes. FBFM, which consists of 5,000+ farmers and 70 professional field staff, is a not-for-profit organization available to all farm operators in Illinois. FBFM field staff provide on-farm counsel along with recordkeeping, farm financial management, business entity planning and income tax management. For more information, please contact our office located on the campus of the University of Illinois in the Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics at 217-333-8346 or visit the FBFM website at www.fbfm.org.
A video representation of this and other 2021 results can be found on the farmdoc YouTube channel at https://go.illinois.edu/FBFM2021
Source : illinois.edu