Farmland preservation information center Farmland preservation information center Search farmland information center
Farmland Information Center Home PageFarmland Preservation LawsFarmland Preservation LiteratureFarmland Preservation Sample DocumentsFarmland Information Center States PageFarmland Preservation StatisticsFarmland Preservation Technical ResourcesAbout the Farmland Information Center
farmland preservation literature
Farm Business and Household Expenditure Patterns and Local Communities: Evidence from a National Survey



Farmland Literature
Farm Business and Household Expenditure Patterns and Local Communities: Evidence from a National Survey
Dayton Lambert, Tim Wojan, Patrick Sullivan; Review of Agricultural Economics; volume 31; number 3; page(s) 604-626; 2009; National; Articles
View Text
 


Abstract:
Farm operators are an integral part of some rural economies. The businesses they operate
support jobs and purchase goods and services from local implement and input suppliers.
Farm household spending on food, furniture and appliances, trucks and automobiles, and
a range of consumer goods also supports local jobs and retail businesses. Based on the
2004 Agricultural Resource Management Survey, the linkages between farm household
and business expenditures and communities are explored. Farms in urban areas purchase
household goods in markets closest to the farmstead, but traveled further to purchase farm
business items. The opposite pattern was observed in rural locations.


Farmland Information Center
800.370.4879

Contact us with questions

American Farmland TrustNRCS

©2006 Farmland Information Center
Web site design by gravity switch, inc.