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Abstract
This report contains estimates of the number of new farms and the number of
exits from farming in North Carolina for various periods of time between 1978 and
1992. Entrance and exit rates are based on the latest information provided by the
Census of Agriculture about the total number of farms in each county as well as the
number of years operators reported managing a given farm. Comparing
characteristics of new farming operations with those that have existed for a longer
period of time provides insights about some elements of the evolving structure of
agricultural production in North Carolina.
The total number of farms in North Carolina decreased more than 40 percent
between 1974 and 1992. The rate of turnover in farming operations between 1987
and 1992 was not as great, however, as during the previous decade. Substantial
variation in the rates of change in farm numbers and the ratios of entrants to exits
among counties indicate that factors influencing the number and turnover in farming
operations have not operated uniformly throughout the state. Regional differences in
farm number changes and total acres of farmland indicate more consolidation of
farming operations in the eastern part of North Carolina relative to other parts of the
state.
Much of the decrease in the number of farms in North Carolina has been
concentrated among smaller farm size categories including those up to 220 acres in
size. Nevertheless, nearly 60 percent of all new farms in North Carolina between
1978 and 1992 had less than 50 acres of farmland. Many new farms as well as those
that have been in operation for longer periods of time appear to be part-time
operations in that only a little over half of all farm operators in 1992 considered
farming to be their principal occupation. An increasing proportion of farm operators,
especially among those reporting farming as their principal occupation, are 65 years
of age or older. This suggests increasing rates of management turnover in farming
operations are likely. Considerably larger proportions of new farms, relative to farms
that have been in operation for longer periods of time, are tenants. On the other
hand, the largest proportion of continuing farming operations, especially among those
with annual sales of farm products of $10,000 or more, were part owners.
Consistent with the continuing shift in composition of agricultural production
in the state; an increasing share of new and continuing farms in North Carolina are
livestock oriented. Nevertheless more than 3300, or 42 percent of all farms that
began operations between 1987 and 1992 had 50 percent or more of their total
receipts from cash grain or other field crops.