Complexities of farming
The complexion of farming is changing radically. The land cannot support as many farm families as it did in an earlier time. Small farms are being consolidated into larger ones. General farms, with several kinds of crops and a barnyard of farm animals, are yielding to specialty farms that concentrate on a single major crop. Family farms are declining; corporate farms are increasing. Efficiency is growing. Crops are changing. Techniques are improving. Just as the train, tractor, truck, and airplane changed farm life in the past, the computer and robotics are expected to change farm life in the future (AOL, 1997). And the outcome of this is that during the early 1980's and continuing, the farmer's source of income is indeed being stripped from him. What was once the only means of survival for these farmers, has now become distant memory. Farming techniques are undergoing tremendous changes. Farming will surely become more efficient throughout the world. It will also become more scientific and, in the process perhaps lose some of its romance. People who formerly lived on farms and have fond memories of their rural childhood will barely recognize the new farms. For farmers of the future, it will not be enough to know how to drive
And without this credit, many farmers face the inevitable, that is, closing and selling their farmland. The decline of the family farm has been heralded for decades, as growing numbers of people moved from the country top the city, and then to the suburbs. First, older farmers seemed to stay in farming longer. Despite technology playing an important part in farming, so does family farms becoming a capitalist unit of agricultural production. Its corner stone, the minimum price provision. From the words of a Willow Springs, Mo. The "Save the Family Farm" aimed to provide an alternative. "It's not a small business anymore", says John Scott, farm management and land economics professor at the University of Illinois-Champaign. This is where farmers are caught between declining farm prices and rising costs.
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