“Producers can compare these "break-even" prices to expected market prices to see which crop is most likely to compete with the reference crop,” says Ron Haugen, NDSU Extension farm management specialist. “Grain prices can move quickly. The program provides a tool for producers to check the changing scenarios until final planting decisions are made this spring.”
The program includes an underlying assumption that fixed costs, such as machinery ownership, land, and the owner’s labor and management, do not vary among crop choices and therefore do not need to be included in the analysis.
Haugen adds, “In practice, there may be differences in fixed costs that should be considered. For example, there may be additional labor, management and risk associated with a competing crop.”
Source : ndsu.edu