Profile of U.S. Agriculture
Agricultural productivity is a key factor in an economy's industrial transformation. The United States has been especially successful in increasing agricultural productivity to a point where it can feed a growing population while at the same time reducing the absolute size of the farm population, the amount of land used in agriculture, and the number of farms. One negative side of this transformtion is that productivity has been sustained by use not just of mechanical inputs but more critically by the used of derived energy inputs in the form of chemical fertilizers and pesticides. By themselves, these energy inputs may not be harmful initally, but when increased concentrations are used, the reduce the net energy output from agriculture and pose toxic risks to consumers. For the future, the challenge in maintaining agricultural productivity will be in providing ways to make a more efficient use of existing inputs, even as new input substitutions are made. Technological progress thus is the key to success. Additional links are provided at the end of this site.
Farm Population
(in millions)
Farm Share of U.S. Population
Number of Farms
(in thousands)
Mean Agricultural Population per Farm
1910 32.1 35 6,366 5.04 1920 31.9 30 6,454 4.94 1930 30.5 25 6,295 4.84 1940 30.5 23 6,102 4.99 1950 23 15 5,388 4.26 1960 15.6 9 3,962 3.93 1970 9.7 5 2,954 3.28 1980 7.2 3 2,440 2.95 1985 5.4 2 2,293 2.35 1993 4.6 1 2,068 2.22 1995 2000 Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture
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Agricultural Economics | University of Minnesota |
FAO | Food and Agricultural Organization |
USDA | U.S. Dept. of Agriculture - Agricultural Statistics |
AgCensus | U.S. Department of Agriculture - Census |
Last update:d 2/6/99
Phillip LeBel
Address: LeBelp@mail.montclair.edu