@article{Weisgerber:324004,
      recid = {324004},
      author = {Weisgerber, P.},
      title = {Commercial Wheat Production:  World Market, U.S.  Production Centers, Costs and Returns Analysis},
      address = {1971-09},
      number = {1485-2022-1520},
      series = {ERS-480},
      pages = {33},
      year = {1971},
      note = {The PDF is missing page one of the report.},
      abstract = {A glut in the world wheat supply has caused several major  exporting nations to adopt measures in supply control.   Farm program restrictions on permitted wheat acres have  influenced costs and returns to U.S. producers,  particularly in the wheat specialty areas.  Financial  earnings of a program participant on a viable wheat farm  are of considerable interest to formulators of farm policy  and to U.S. legislators. Appropriate financial returns were  allocated to production resources other than the farm  operator's labor and entrepreneurship.  The latter inputs  were then accorded the residual return from the farm  business.  A return to the ownership of land used in wheat  production was also calculated.  In the period 1967-69,  average annual returns to operator's labor and  entrepreneurship ranged from $8,232 (Central Plains) to  $14,666 (Pacific Northwest).  The net annual benefits of  land ownership ranged from 2.2 to 9.1 percent of the market  value of the land.},
      url = {http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/324004},
      doi = {https://doi.org/10.22004/ag.econ.324004},
}