The Forest Industry Contractors Association estimates that close to 50 operators have left the industry due to the slump in the log export trade.
A fall in demand from the main market, China, earlier this year has sent log prices tumbling, which has in turn reduced harvesting.
Contractors Association chief executive John Stulen said the main impact had been on smaller scale and short-term operators working on farm forestry blocks, where there had been a surge in logging when the prices shot up last year.
"As those prices have dropped back in China over the last few months farm forestry has actually shut the door and it's basically a closed industry because there's not enough money it."
Mr Stulen said when the forest industry hit its accident crisis point last year, when 10 forestry workers died, it coincided with the biggest farm forestry harvest ever seen.
The government safety agency, Worksafe New Zealand, said serious injuries reported in the industry almost halved in the first five months of this year, compared with last year.
But it said in its submission to the independent forest safety review, that there was no firm evidence that the fundamental changes required to improve safety in the sector have occurred in a sustainable way.