AG & Culture
Are farm bankruptcies really skyrocketing… or are headlines missing the bigger picture? In Episode 15 of the AG & Culture Podcast, Mike Usry and Joseph Boehm break down the recent headlines claiming that farm bankruptcies increased 46% — and unpack the context, economics, and realities behind the numbers. This episode explores the financial pressures facing modern farmers, the role of debt and industrial agriculture, and why farming is far more complicated than the internet often makes it seem. From fuel costs and fertilizer prices to government subsidies, equipment debt, and vertically integrated farming systems, Mike explains why many farmers feel financially squeezed — while also pushing back against sensationalized “collapse of agriculture” narratives. Topics Covered in This Episode • The truth behind the “46% increase” in farm bankruptcies • Why headlines can be technically true but emotionally misleading • Chapter 12 farm bankruptcy explained • Why restructuring doesn’t always mean a farm is failing • The difference between clickbait economics vs reality • Rising fuel, fertilizer, and equipment costs in agriculture • Why modern farming has become heavily dependent on debt • How government subsidies and corporate contracts shape farming • The hidden pressures facing Midwest grain farmers • GMO seed contracts and input dependency • Why farmers often can’t repair their own equipment • The similarities and differences between today and the 1980s farm crisis • Why many farmers continue farming despite razor-thin margins • The psychology and lifestyle behind agricultural life Mike also discusses the growing disconnect between urban America and agriculture — and why people outside farming often misunderstand the realities of food production and rural life. Key Takeaway The situation in agriculture is nuanced. There are real pressures on farmers today — but headlines alone rarely tell the full story. And despite the economics, many farmers continue because farming is more than a business: it’s a lifestyle, a calling, and a connection to something deeper.
17 episodios
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