Main Street Economist, Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank, Vol. III, Issue 5.)
The chart shows a price index for crude oil, natural gas, farm fertilizer cost and farm fuel cost. The index is equal to 100 in January of 2007, so the prices are shown against the benchmark from January 2005 until January 2008. Tremendous cost increases (and risk) are seen from Jan 2007 to July 2008.
What do you think are the key input costs to watch for in the next 1o years? Are Colorado farms well positioned for input cost increases?
3 comments:
James,
I'd be interested in seeing commodity prices (corn/wheat/sobean) on the chart, as well. Do fertilizer prices track commodity prices (i.e. what fertilizer dealers think they can extract from the farmer)? Or are fertilizer prices more directly related to natural gas prices?
Ernie Marx
I would like to know how or if fertilizer prices are linked to gas prices. Also Iwould like to see what commodity prices will be for wheat as it is the only crop that affects me directly.
Would increasing the cost of fertilizer increase the cost of fuel for farmers? I would like to see millet represented on the chart for it also affects the economy.
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