46,000 Dairy Farms Closed Down in Last 10 Years

Friday, July 09, 2010

Times are especially bad for dairy farmers across the United States. About 40% of all dairy farms (or 46,000) went out of business over the last 10 years, due to falling milk prices and rising costs. Farmers went from getting $21.70 per hundred pounds of milk to $11.30 from 2007 to 2009, while animal feed costs increased 35% and fuel prices rose 30%.

 
A big problem resides in the Federal Milk Marketing Order (FMMO) system, which the U.S. government created during the Depression as a way to keep dairy farmers in business. “Today, however, the FMMO system has become a weapon used by huge dairy companies to accomplish that same nefarious goal–paying farmers as little as possible,” writes blogger Regina Weiss of the Grace Foundation.
-Noel Brinkerhoff
 

Comments

jeanna 13 years ago
wish you had more info, i love this topic and wana write a paper on it. i hate that all the small farms are disappearing and large companies are taking over putting people out of jobs and them loosing their farm.

Leave a comment