date:Dec 28, 2012
n they would have, generally, had moisture levels been closer to normal.
While the prices -- and the revenue protection levels they afforded via crop insurance -- have been good to a lot of farmers' pocketbooks, that could change in the next year because of the speed at which different sectors of the ag economy adjust to one another, says University of Illinois Extension agricultural economist Gary Schnitkey.
One unfortunate aspect of this drought increase may be that cash rent levels likely