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Technology
Info-Tech and Agriculture
Technological change is bringing about one
of the most dynamic periods in American agriculture. Dallas Fed Economist
Fiona D. Sigalla discusses the impact of information technology on agriculture.
We don't talk
or hear as much about farming and ranching as we used to because
its employment base has declined so much over time. But that decline
is a sign of its success rather than its failure. Fewer and fewer
people are producing more and more because of astounding gains in
productivity. With just under 3 percent of the total workforce,
American farmers and ranchers are feeding our country and much of
the rest of the world.
Between 1948
and 1996, agricultural labor productivity increased more than eightfold.
The number of people fed by one farmer has jumped from 15 in 1950
to 128 in 1995, including 34 outside the United States. Since 1948,
agricultural production has doubled, while total input use, including
labor, land and machinery, declined slightly.
From the Global
Positioning System (GPS) to fiber optics to computer-driven harvesters,
U.S. farmers and ranchers use the highest level of technology and
are among the most efficient producers in the world. For consumers,
this technology means higher quality food at a lower cost.
Today's
technology gives farmers with thousands of acres of land the same
information and control backyard gardeners have at their fingertips.
Each plot of land can receive ample water, seed and fertilizer to
maximize yield, without excess. Computers, satellites and microchips
are giving farmers better information and making machinery smarter
and more powerful to get the most from every input. Technology is
dramatically increasing the amount of land each farmer can work
effectively.
Today's tractors
are easier to use and can do more for the farmer. Tractors have
better visibility, including improved lighting systems for nighttime
work and sophisticated fingertip controls that allow farmers to
adjust quickly to changing field conditions. Farmers are making
tractors smarter by equipping them to utilize the Global Positioning
System. Originally developed by the military to navigate U.S. submarines,
the GPS uses 24 satellites orbiting 12,000 miles above the Earth's
surface to calculate a tractor's exact position in the field.
Using the GPS
locational device and sensors in the field, farmers can harvest,
along with their crops, detailed digital maps of their fields, plotting
slope, soil type, moisture, historical yield, and weed and insect
problems. Information is collected on portions of the field as small
as 18 inches. Farmers use these maps to program computers attached
to variable rate equipment that modifies the application rate of
all inputs such as tillage, seeds, fertilizer, herbicides and irrigation
water. Precise application reduces waste and improves yield. Future
innovations will extend the use of the GPS. For example, a computer-driven
harvester will use the GPS, wheel sensors and a video camera to
"see" a crop line so it can harvest a field without a
driver or a remote operator.
Livestock
producers are also using computers to get better information about
their operations. Computer chips imbedded in the animal's ear can
monitor growth and production. A farmer with 5,000 dairy cows can
easily monitor milk production and health records, scanning the
chip as a cow enters the milking facility to automatically weigh
and deliver an individually formulated feed ration.
Computers help
producers monitor and respond to weather variability on a day-to-day
basis. Solar-powered weather stations in the field can be hooked
up to a farmer's computer to relay information about current air
and soil temperature, precipitation, relative humidity, leaf wetness,
soil moisture, day length, wind speed and solar radiation.
The Internet
is increasing communication and business opportunities within the
agricultural community, which previously operated in the relative
isolation of rural areas. Farmers, agricultural researchers, cooperatives,
suppliers and buyers use the Internet to exchange ideas and information,
as well as to conduct business with each other. Machinery, seed
chemicals and other types of agricultural products can be purchased
and sold online. People can search for jobs and employees.
Producers use
the Internet to monitor prices quickly and as often as they like.
Farmers from around the world can exchange ideas, post questions
and get answers about specific topics, ranging from marketing and
investing to tips on "no-till" farming.
Computers increase
the amount of information farmers can process, from details on day-to-day
operations to the latest research on new chemicals or biological
breakthroughs. The computer allows farmers to study alternate management
decisions.
What are the
benefits of more irrigation? Is it cost-effective to apply additional
chemicals? When is the best time to sell crops or buy inputs? With
improved record-keeping, more detailed cost analysis and more sophisticated
marketing strategies, farmers are making better decisions and earning
higher profits.
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Farmers' Use of Info-Tech
Computers
are used on 83.8% of America's farms.
Farmers
and ranchers use of information technologies:
73.2% own a celluar telephone
41.9% communicate by fax
32.2% have access to the Internet
17.1% have access to an electronic bulletin board
SOURCE: Purdue
University, American Farm Bureau Federation, www.fb.com
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Fiona
D. Sigalla is an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas.
SUGGESTED
CITATION:
Sigalla,
Fiona D. (2000), "Info-Tech and Agriculture,"
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Expand Your Insight,
June 1, http://www.dallasfed.org/eyi/tech/0006agric.html
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