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Home » U.S. Farm Program Crops in the Planting Flexibility Era

U.S. Farm Program Crops in the Planting Flexibility Era

April 1, 20255 Mins Read News
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By Carl Zulauf, Gary Schnitkey, Jonathan Coppess, and Nick Paulson

In the Farmdoc Daily of March 3, 2025, we documented the importance of the 1991 farm bill policy decision to give U.S. farmers the freedom to make planting decisions less constrained by government commodity programs. That article focused on corn, soybeans, and wheat, the three largest-acreage farm program crops. In this article, we extend the analysis to other 1991 farm program crops, as well as hay, the third largest U.S. field crop in acres. These crops have evolved into three groups. Corn and soybeans have become the foundational crops of modern agriculture. Their acres are large and increasing. Hay and wheat are legacy large-acreage crops. Their acres are large, but declining. The remaining 1991 program crops have smaller acreages, with increasing geographical concentration.

Current U.S. Planted Acres by Crop

Average planted acres were calculated for 1991–95 and 2021–24 using data from QuickStats, USDA, and NASS (U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Statistics Service). The earlier period is the first four years of the planting flexibility era. The later period is the last four available years. Four-year periods are used to smooth year-to-year variability and to take crop rotations into account.

The 10 crops in this study averaged 303 million planted acres per year over 2021–24 (see Figure 1). Corn-soybeans averaged 178 million acres. Hay-wheat averaged 97 million acres. The other six crops averaged 28 million acres.

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Percent Change in Planted Acres by Crop

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Other Planting Flexibility Outcomes

Planting flexibility allowed farmers to plant any crop except fruits, vegetables, and wild rice. Planting of principal field crops other than the 10 crops in this study have increased 0.5 million acres, or 4% (see Figure 3). Planting flexibility also allowed farmers to not plant a crop and retain program base acres. Total acres planted to principal field crop have declined 8 million, or 2% (see Figure 3). The relatively small impact of these two planting flexibility provisions suggests program crops are generally the most profitable use of cropland at least at the U.S. level, and given the market dynamics and policy mix that have existed since 1990. U.S. principal crops are listed in Data Note 1.

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Geographical Concentration

Geographical concentration differs notably among the four larger-acreage crops and six smaller-acreage crops. In 2021–24, the largest state accounted for at most 16% of U.S. planted acres of corn, soybeans, hay, and wheat (see Figure 4). In contrast, the largest state accounted for 37% or more of U.S. acres for the other crops except oats (17%). The three-state concentration ratios also differ notably (see Figure 5). Of the larger-acreage crops, three-state concentration is highest for wheat (42%). In contrast, three-state concentration exceeds 70% for the smaller-acreage crops, again except oats (40%).

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Trends in concentration also differ. One- and three-state concentrations for corn, soybeans, hay, and wheat have changed little. Concentration of the other six crops has increased, often by double digits.

Acreage Relationships

To further explore changes in acres since planting flexibility was authorized, the correlation between changes in acres from 1991–94 to 2021–24 was examined for crop-state combinations that had data for all eight years. We will discuss only the six correlations that are significant with 95% statistical confidence. A two-tail statistical test was used because acres can increase and decrease.

Five of the six correlations are negative (see Table 1), implying that as acres increase for one crop, acres decline for the other crop. The large increase in soybean acres since 1990 is statistically related to declines in wheat, hay, and barley acres. Soybeans-barley had the strongest relationship. Its explanatory power was 73%.

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At the state level, declines in wheat acres were more strongly related to increases in corn acres than to increases in soybean acres. Respective explanatory power was 75% and 59%. The Farmdoc Daily of March 3, 2025 reached the same conclusion. Its analysis included prevent plant with planted acres and was limited to states with over 1 million acres each of corn and soybeans.

Wheat also had a statistically significant negative relationship with sorghum, even though U.S. acres of both crops have declined. This finding might be due to random chance. On the other hand, a negative correlation is consistent with the growth in U.S. production of animals and animal products, which implies the need for more feed grain acres. Sorghum and wheat are grown in drier agriclimates, but sorghum is primarily a livestock feed grain, while wheat in the U.S. is primarily a human food grain.

Only corn and soybeans have a positive correlation that is significant with 95% statistical confidence, underscoring the intertwined relationship of these two crops in modern agriculture.

Discussion

Since 1990:

  • Corn and soybeans have become the foundational crops of modern agriculture, as acres increase.
  • Hay and wheat have become legacy large-acreage field crops, as acres decline.
  • Other 1990 program crops have declined and become increasingly concentrated in a few states.

Oats are an outlier. Of the 10 crops in this study, acres declined the most (minus-67%) but remain geographically dispersed. Lack of geographical concentration is likely a key reason oats consistently receive some of the lowest payments from commodity programs, despite being a historically important crop (see Farmdoc Daily of June 17, 2020). Geographical concentration of smaller-acreage crops increases the likelihood that congressional champions exist.

Data Note 1

Principal crops are barley, canola, chickpeas, corn, cotton, dry edible beans, hay, oats, peanuts, potatoes, proso millet, rice, rye, sorghum, soybeans, sugar beets, sugarcane, sunflower, tobacco, and wheat. Harvested acres are used for hay, sugarcane, and tobacco. Acres include acres of unharvested small grains planted as cover crops and double–cropped acres.

U.S. Farm Program Crops in the Planting Flexibility Era was originally published by Farmdoc.

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