Monday, February 16, 2026

Members in the News: February 16, 2026

 Glynn Tonsor, Kansas State University

The Cost of This Grocery Staple is Nearing Record Highs — and Americans Can't Get Enough

By: Fox News – February 9, 2026

“There’s nothing that forces me or you or anybody else when we go into the grocery store to pay more for beef. People are choosing to," he said. "The consumer desire for beef is strong and, regardless of the supply-side situation, that has the effect of pulling prices up."

(Continued...)
Read more on: Fox News


Eric Belasco, Montana State University

The Surprising Reason Why Americans Could Face High Beef Prices For Years

By: Fox News – February 11, 2026

"The biggest thing has been drought… ears of dry weather have wiped out grasslands across the West and Plains, leaving ranchers without enough feed or water to sustain their herds. Many have been forced to sell cattle early, even the cows needed to produce the next generation of calves, making it difficult to rebuild America's herds.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Fox News


David Ortega, Michigan State University

  • Cocoa Crunch: Pittsburgh-Area Chocolatiers Face Valentine’s Day Amid Cost Crisis
    By: WESA - February 13, 2026
  • Are Walmart Customers Getting Overcharged For Misweighed Meats?
    By: USA Today - February 12, 2026
  • More Argentina Beef Imports Won't Do Much to Ease Costs For Consumers, According to Experts
    By: CBS News - February 9, 2026

Michael Langemeier, Purdue University

Farmers’ Confidence Plunges: Purdue Ag Barometer Sees Sharp January Collapse

By: Hoosier Ag Today - February 3, 2026

“What stands out this month is the growing number of producers who report that higher operating-loan needs stem from carrying over unpaid debt from the previous year.”

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Read more on: Hoosier Ag Today


Alexandra Hill, University of California, Berkeley

California Farm Bureau Announces New State Legislation Aims to Boost Farmworker Pay and Support Agricultural Employers

By: Sierra Sun Times – February 3, 2026

“Beginning in 2019, the law phased in a requirement that farmworkers be paid time and a half when they work more than 40 hours a week. Previously, farmworkers worked up to 60 hours a week before they were entitled to overtime pay.”

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Read more on: Sierra Sun Times


Seth Meyer, University of Missouri

Former USDA Chief Economist: Crop Farmers Facing Tight Margins With No Clear Catalyst

By: Brownfield – February 6, 2026

“They’ve got to be prepared to wait it out unfortunately because you don’t know when it’s going to come whether it’s a war, a shortfall in crop with us, the Brazilians, the Europeans, or the Australians. So there isn’t an immediate spark to me that says there’s an obvious way out of this in the short run, but it could come.”

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Read more on: Brownfield


Paul Goeringer, University of Maryland

Farmers, Trump Oppose Maryland Renewable Energy Solar Farms

By: Byteseu – February 9, 2026

“I think the biggest concerns have been a lot of areas related to taking farmland out of production. It is a balancing act of trying to find the prime spots to put it that help but also maintaining farmland.”

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Read more on: Byteseu


Joseph Balagtas, Purdue University

CFI Survey: 68% of Americans Rate Their Diets as Thriving

By: National Hog Farmer – February 11, 2026

“A majority of Americans — 68% — give themselves a score of 7 to 10, which corresponds to the label of ‘thriving’ on the well-being index.”  

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Read more on: National Hog Farmer


Hope Michelson, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Jessica Rudder,
Oregon State University
Travis Lybbert,
University of California, Davis

African Agriculture's Underappreciated Supply Side

By: VoxDev – January 28, 2026

“Low agricultural productivity in sub-Saharan Africa cannot be explained by farmer behaviour alone, as major supply-side failures in input markets mean improved seeds and fertilisers often fail to reach farmers at the right time, price, or scale. Understanding the risks, incentives, and constraints faced by agro-dealers is essential if technological advances are to translate into sustained productivity gains.”

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Read more on: VoxDev



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Monday, February 9, 2026

Members in the News: February 9, 2026

 Brian Coffey, Kansas State University

Why Beef Prices Remain High Despite Record-Low Cattle Supplies”

By: Drovers – January 29, 2026

“A microeconomic assessment is really about using economic theory and models to help explain what we’re seeing in the real world. We make simplifying assumptions and apply economic frameworks to real data so we can isolate what’s driving changes in prices and quantities.”

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Read more on: Vegetable Grower News


Zach Rutledge, Michigan State University

Deportations Are Set to Explode Worrying Farmers Already Facing Labor Shortage

By: Wisconsin State Farmer – January 30, 2026

“I’ve heard conflicting reports. And so, I don’t know where the current policy stands… There’s been a crisis in farm labor for some time, and it certainly would be exacerbated by immigration enforcement.”

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Read more on: Wisconsin State Farmer


Nick Paulson, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Chad Hart,
Iowa State University

Farmers Are in Line For Billions of Bailout Money. Will it Be Enough to Offset Losses?

By: Wisconsin State Farmer – February 2, 2026

“The Farmer Bridge Assistance Program is designed to distribute financial aid quickly. The tradeoff is that payment rates, based on national averages, may not reflect the financial realities for individual farms.”

 

“Trade disruptions in 2025 decreased demand and contributed to an oversupply of some U.S. commodities. Cotton, rice and soybeans experienced more significant market impacts due to retaliatory tariffs compared to corn and wheat.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Wisconsin State Farmer


Steven Deller, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Paul Mitchell,
University of Wisconsin-Madison

Ag Leaders: Trade Could Make or Break Wisconsin Farms in 2026

By: WPR – February 2, 2026

“Trade disputes and rapidly changing tariffs brought by President Donald Trump’s administration last year created tremendous uncertainty for agriculture… It’s undermining confidence in terms of prices for both exports and imported inputs.”

“The one-time, emergency relief programs that were paid out last year meant 2025 had the second highest amount of direct payments to farmers in U.S. history. Only in 2020, when COVID-19 caused huge disruptions to food supply chains, did farmers receive more assistance.”

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Read more on: WPR


Amitrajeet Batabyal, Rochester Institute of Technology

  • Rethinking Dowries: How Migration and Old-Age Security Intersect”By: By: Basis Point – February 4, 2026
  • The Curious Economics of a Shrinking Smoking Market
    By: Rochester Bussiness Journal - February 6, 2026 

Farzad Taheripour, Purdue University

Year-Round E-15 Could Help Farmers, But Not As Much As Less Restricted Trade

By: Farms.com – January 30, 2026

“Allowing the sale of E-15 throughout the year would benefit farmers. It is important to generate a secure market for this product, to help farmers to be able to continue to invest in the industry.”

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Read more on: Farms.com


Cesar Escalante, University of Georgia - Athens

The Dramatic Rise of Farm Labor Contractors Has Led to Rampant Abuses. Here’s Why Regulators Have Failed to Stop Them

By: ProPublica – February 5, 2026

“Regardless of the administration — even ones that are sympathetic to labor — regulators are handicapped. They know what’s happening, but they’re incapable of enforcing the regulations.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: ProPublica


Ian Sheldon, The Ohio State University

  • Ag Economist: U.S. Soybean Prices Likely to Stay Under Pressure in 2026
    By: Brownfield – January 23, 2026  
  • Tariffs, Costs and Taxes on Farmers’ Minds
    By: Lima News – January 31, 2026
  • EU Trade Deal Delay Could Increase Market Volatility for U.S. Farmers
    By: Brownfield - February 2, 2026

Laura Kalambokidis, University of Minnesota

Uncertainty Looms Large For Minnesota Businesses Amid ICE Surge

By: MPR News – February 5, 2026

“A business might postpone making decisions about investment or hiring, and that maybe they'll have to forego some profit, potentially profitable opportunity as a result.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: MPR News


David Ortega, Michigan State University

  • Stateside Radio Interview on Tariffs, Food Prices and Supreme Court Decision
    By: MPR News - February 2, 2026  
  • In a Year, Foreign Investors Bought Another 71,000 Acres of Michigan Agricultural Land
    By: MLive – February 1, 2026

Monday, February 2, 2026

Members in the News: February 2, 2026

 Zach Rutledge, Michigan State University

New on-Demand Webinar Explores Labor Challenges and Opportunities for Growers

By: Vegetable Grower News – January 28, 2026

“Michigan State University extension economist Zach Rutledge discusses major changes to the H-2A program for 2025, including new Department of Labor rules on Adverse Effect Wage Rates and housing cost deductions, and explains how these updates could affect grower operations.”

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Read more on: Vegetable Grower News


Hunter Biram, University of Arkansas
Francis Tsiboe,
North Dakota State University

How Could Insured Farmers Adjust to the Expanding Access to Risk Protection (EARP) Rule From USDA?

By: FRYAR – January 19, 2026

"In this episode, Hunter Biram and special guest Francis Tsiboe explore how USDA’s new Expanding Access to Risk Protection (EARP) rule will reshape prevented planting insurance starting in the 2027 crop year."

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Read more on: FRYAR


Shawn Arita, North Dakota State University

No. Dakota State Reports How Much Tariffs Have Cost Farmers

By: Agri Market News – January 22, 2026

"The high pass-through rate may reflect the uncertainty around tariff levels that prevailed around President Donald Trump's April "liberation day" announcement of reciprocal tariffs. It was unclear whether some exporters would be subject to levies above 10% as importers moved to stockpile inventory."

(Continued...)
Read more on: Agri Market News


Shawn Arita, North Dakota State University
Sandro Steinbach,
North Dakota State University

NDGGA Leaders Advocate for North Dakota Wheat at MWCA Annual Meeting

By: NDGGA – January 16, 2026

The Midwest Council on Agriculture (MWCA) recently held its Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., from December 16–18, 2026. MWCA brings together a multi-state coalition of farmers, ranchers, agribusinesses, commodity groups, and agricultural lenders united by shared goals. The organization advocates for strong agricultural and economic policies that support the long-term sustainability of the Midwest’s agricultural industry.

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Read more on: NDGGA


David Ortega, Michigan State University

  • States with Highest -and Lowest- Grocery bills in US
    By: Newsweek – January 29, 2026
  • How Do Grocers Prepare for a Winter Storm and Have Enough to Restock?
    By: USA Today – January 23, 2026

Amitrajeet Batabyal, Rochester Institute of Technology

Why do Struggling Students Fail in School?

By: Substack – January 26, 2206

“Struggling students fail in school because they lack motivation—this idea is so widespread that it often goes unquestioned. In this view, a child who doesn’t complete homework or performs poorly on exams is seen as uninterested, undisciplined, or simply not trying hard enough.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Substack


Joseph Balagtas, Purdue University

Food Prices, Economic Strain Reshaped Grocery Shopping in 2025

By: National Hog Farmer – January 21, 2026

“The majority of respondents, 82%, modified their shopping behaviors. The most common adjustments were seeking sales and discounts, switching to cheaper brands, and reducing nonessential purchases.”

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Read more on: National Hog Farmer


James Mitchell, University of Arkansas

Arkansas Expert Says Tyson Layoffs Indicative of Larger Beef Industry Issues

By: 5 News Online – January 21, 2026

“When you have plants that are that large, that close or decrease in terms of how much they're going to operate, that impacts the entire beef cattle industry. So that's going to impact Arkansas, and that will impact, you know, the beef industry across the United States.”

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Read more on: 5 News Online


Hope Michelson, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Kathy Baylis,
University of California, Santa Barbara
Chungmann Kim,
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Global Measures Consistently Underestimate Food Insecurity; One in Five Who Suffer From Hunger May Go Uncounted

By: Agriamerica -December 12, 2026 

"Evaluating the accuracy of these analyses is difficult because IPC are trying to identify crises that are coming in the near term. If they are effective and the humanitarian community responds to their analyses, those crises will be averted or at least lessened. This means that if they are correct, they are in a sense always wrong,"

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Read more on: Agriamerica


Khashi Ghorbani, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

How a Potential Antibiotics Ban Could Affect Apple Growers

By: Environmental News Network – January 23, 2026

“The majority of antibiotics in plant agriculture are used on fire blight in pear and apple orchards. Growers face a dilemma, because they must treat their trees to protect them, but they run the risk of overusing the pesticides, so the disease develops resistance.”

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Read more on: Environmental News Network


Kenneth Burdine, University of Kentucky

Placements Decline, But Marketings Increase in Latest Cattle on Feed Report

By: Brownfield News – January 26, 2026

“While it was expected, there’s a reason it is significant. We weren’t importing live cattle from Mexico in December 2024. It’s important to remember that we’re comparing that December 2025 placement number to a month in 2024 when we weren’t importing live cattle from Mexico.”

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Read more on: Brownfield News


Bradley Lubben, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Calls About Financial Strain Are Increasing as Farmers Wait For Federal Assistance

By: Nebraska Public Radio – January 27, 2026

“Although Nebraska’s net farm income was hitting near record highs, there was a major caveat within the data.When you try and disaggregate net farm income from the market, plus government payments, the government payments are a huge part of the move up in farm income this year.”

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Read more on: Nebraska Public Radio


Zach Raff, North Carolina State University

New USDA Report Explores the Economics of Precision Agriculture in Dairy Farming

By: Morning Ag Clips - January 27, 2026

“These box robots, they cost around $200,000 a unit. So, if you’re putting those kinds of costs in the operation, people want to see that they’re profitable... Looking at dairy farms that have implemented robotic milking systemsm, the data shows a consistent increase in profitability.”

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Read more on: Morning Ag Clips