budgets: uses in farm management. types of budgets whole-farm enterprise partial

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Budgets: Uses in Farm Management

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Page 1: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Budgets: Uses in Farm Management

Page 2: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Types of Budgets

Whole-farm

Enterprise

Partial

Page 3: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Whole-Farm Budget

Identify the resources available for use in production

Determine physical production data that will be used in the input/output process

Identify reliable prices (input/output)Calculate expected costs and returnsProvides a plan for maximizing the returns

to owned resources.

Page 4: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Enterprise Budgets

Provide an estimate of potential revenue, expenses, and profit for a single enterprise

Each type of crop or livestock is an enterpriseThe base unit for crops is usually one acreThe base unit for livestock may be one head

or some other convenient size

Page 5: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Partial Budgets

Focus on costs and benefits of alternative plans on a small part of the farm

Consider only the costs and returns that will change

Isolate the impact of changeOrganize data to minimize the chances of

overlooking something or counting an item twice

Page 6: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Why Budget?

Page 7: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Why Budget?Planning

Evaluate options before you commit resourcesTest economic and financial feasibility of

alternatives (different enterprises, different production systems) Estimate profits Project cash flows

Estimate the size of farm needed to earn a specified return

Develop a production and marketing planUncover costs that you may not have considered

Page 8: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Why Budget?

ImplementationProvide the documentation necessary to

obtain/maintain creditworthinessEstimate the amount of rent that can be paid

for land or machinery Identify production and financial risks and

whether they may be managedMonitor cash flows

Page 9: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Why Budget?

ControlThink of the enterprise budget as an

enterprise specific “income statement”Compare projected to actual results

Page 10: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Constructing an Enterprise Budget

Revenue all cash and noncash revenue from production

Operating or variable expenses all costs that would be incurred only if the crop/livestock is

produced

Ownership or fixed expenses costs that must be paid even if no crop/livestock is

produced

Profit return to all resources that were not charged in the budget

(usually management)

Page 11: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Revenue

Crop Yield Price Government payments Crop insurance

proceeds Changes in inventory Other sources

Livestock Production: calves,

pigs, milk, etc. Price Breeding herd

replacements Changes in inventory

Page 12: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

(Operating) Variable CostsCrop BudgetSeed, fertilizer, and

chemicalsFuel, oil, and

lubricantsRepairsLabor (operator and

hired) Interest on variable

expensesOther cash

expenses

Livestock BudgetFeedVeterinary and

healthRepairsLabor (operator

and hired) Interest on

variable expenses

Page 13: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Fixed Costs

Machinery, equipment, building/facility Depreciation

Economic useful life

Interest Average investment (opportunity cost on funds) Interest rate

Taxes and insurance

Land charge?

Page 14: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial
Page 15: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial
Page 16: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Interpreting and Analyzing Enterprise BudgetsAn economic enterprise budget includes

information on opportunity costs of labor, capital, land and perhaps management.

The profit (or loss) is what remains after covering all expenses, including opportunity costs.

Page 17: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Interpreting and Analyzing Enterprise Budgets Returns Above Total Operating Costs

Production economically rational if total receipts minus total operating costs is greater than zero in the short run

Returns Above All Specified CostsReturn to management, risk, and land must be

positive to survive in the long run

Page 18: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Budget notesMany possible input levels and

combinations.Least cost input combinations should be

incorporated into budget.Fixed cost estimates are usually based on

an assumed farm size or level of input use.Unit of measurementTime periodMultiple products

Page 19: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Other budget notes

Price and production assumptions A budget to be used in next year’s plan should use an

estimate of next year’s prices and production levels. A budget that is used to make long range plans should use

long-run estimates of prices and production levels. Price received - ready markets or limited buyers?

Use budgets to conduct sensitivity Average, best case, worse case yields or performance Average, best case, worse case prices

Page 20: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Break-Even AnalysisWhat quantity of yield/price is required to

cover wheat production costs? Operating costs $157.73

Fixed costs 31.37

Total costs $189.10

To cover variable costs: $158 cost/33.4 bu = $4.72 break-even wheat price $158 cost/$6 wheat price = 26 bu break-even yield

To cover all costs : $189 cost/33.4 bu = $5.66 break-even wheat price $189 cost/$6 wheat price = 32 bu break-even yield

Page 21: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Sensitivity Analysis

Page 22: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

OSU Enterprise Budgets

 

Crops Livestock Hay & Pasture

Barley Cow/Calf Perennial Forages

Canola Stocker Cattle Annual Forages

Corn Meat Goats Alfalfa

Corn Silage Stocker Goats

Cotton Horticulture

Grain Sorghum Blueberries

Oats Grapes

Peanuts Native & Improved Pecans

Rye Peaches

Soybeans Watermelon

Wheat

As a part of Annie’s Project, you can select any 4 budgets free!

Page 23: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Summary: Enterprise Budgets

Organize projected income and expenses for a single enterprise. Economic budgets will include opportunity costs in addition to

cash costs and depreciation. Can be used to compare the profitability of different enterprises

and are useful for developing a whole-farm plan.

Need to know cost of production to Calculate break-even price Develop marketing goals Identify appropriate risk management strategies.

Costs vary from farm to farm and year to year.

Page 24: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Two steps in partial budgeting:

Identify the impacts of change

Quantify the impacts

GIGO = garbage in, garbage out

Page 25: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Partial Budget Format

Positive Effect

Additions to Income Added Receipts Reduced Expenses Total Additions

Negative Effect

Subtractions from Income Added Expenses Reduced Receipts Total Subtractions

Net change associated with the decision = ?

Page 26: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Should I harvest or graze-out wheat?

Positive Effect

Additions to Income Added Receipts Reduced Expenses Total Additions

Negative Effect

Subtractions from Income Added Expenses Reduced Receipts Total Subtractions

Net change associated with the decision = ?

Page 27: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Limitations of Partial Budgets

Only useful in comparing the profitability of two alternatives

Won’t tell you if a proposed change is the most efficient or profitable use of resources given all alternatives

Doesn’t account for time value of money Data may not be readily available Some things are hard to quantify

Page 28: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Sources of Budget Information Actual farm records Extension educators and specialists, educational

materials, and meetings Books on husbandry, industry Producer organizations Other producers Internet sites

Agecon.okstate.edu/budgets Budget Library in National Ag Risk Education Library:

http://www.agrisk.umn.edu/Budgets/CustomSearch.aspx

Use third party sources with caution!

Page 29: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial

Budget Reminders Match to your operation

List all relevant factors Be reasonable in your estimates Can be incomplete or unrealistic if adequate records not

available Include cash and non-cash costs where appropriate

Is it feasible? Cash flow vs. profit Actual vs. planned - compare at regular intervals to

see if problems are occurring

Page 30: Budgets: Uses in Farm Management. Types of Budgets Whole-farm Enterprise Partial