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Northwest Family Farm Bankruptcies Increase

The number of family farms seeking bankruptcy protection grew 24% over the last year, according to an of recent .

The analysis found family farm bankruptcies are rising fastest in the Northwest.

鈥淲e鈥檝e seen low crop prices, low livestock prices for a number of years now,鈥 said chief economist John Newton. 鈥淥n the back, now, of that we have the trade war where agriculture鈥檚 been unfairly retaliated against.鈥

Newton monitors Chapter 12 bankruptcy filings as one measure of health for the farm economy. Chapter 12 is a kind of bankruptcy protection meant to help family farmers reorganize and keep farming.

Nationwide, 580 family farms filed for bankruptcy in the 12-month period ending in September 2019. Newton considers that a sign of poor health.

鈥淲hile it鈥檚 nowhere near the historical highs we saw in the 鈥80s, it鈥檚 an alarming trend that continues to get worse,鈥 he said.

Newton said farmers are also assuming record debt and taking longer to pay it back.

鈥淚鈥檓 getting calls from farmers across the country that may not be at Chapter 12 bankruptcy point, but they鈥檙e very close to it,鈥 he said.

Thirty-three farms in the Northwest filed for Chapter 12 protection over the time period measured. Most of them were in Idaho and Montana, but the figure includes  in their major export markets.

Richard and Sydney Blaine, for example, just days after President Donald Trump signed a law this summer making it easier to access. The Family Farmer Relief Act increased the amount of debt a farmer can have 鈥$10 million 鈥 and still qualify for Chapter 12 protection.

The 33 Northwest bankruptcies represent a 74% increase over the previous year, according to the American Farm Bureau鈥檚 analysis. The size of the increase appears large in part because the Northwest previously had fewer bankruptcy filings than some other regions, such as the Midwest.

Still, economist John Newton said each Chapter 12 bankruptcy matters.

鈥淭hese are family farms,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd these are family farms that are having to restructure their debt due to tough financial conditions in agriculture.鈥

Because of the new bankruptcy rules, more farms could seek protection in the months ahead.

Courtesy of the American Farm Bureau Federation

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Copyright 2019

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Kate Davidson is OPB鈥檚 business and economics reporter. Before moving to Oregon, she was a regular contributor to "Marketplace", a reporter at Michigan Radio focused on economic change in the industrial Midwest and a producer at NPR.
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