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Farmers more confident in themselves, less so about overall economy - survey

09:54 am on 19 June 2024

Survey finds farmers more confident about their own performance, less so about overall agri-economy. Photo: RNZ/Sally Round

Farmers are more confident about the performance of their own business but are less positive about the broader agri economy, Rabobank's latest farmer confidence survey has found.

The rural lenders quarterly survey of about 450 farmers found the number self-assessing their own farm business as unviable decreased from nine percent last quarter to seven percent.

Sheep and beef farmers recorded the most significant upwards lift in confidence from -31 per cent to -17 percent last quarter.

Rabobank chief executive Todd Charteris said sentiment among sheep and beef farmers has been at dire levels over recent quarters, so it was encouraging to see this creeping upwards.

"This is likely to be largely attributable to the strong pricing outlook for beef over the months ahead, It's also good to see slight rises in confidence in their own businesses among dairy farmers and horticulturalists.

"Dairy farmers saw some healthy price rises at GDT auctions during May and early June which will have put a bit more of a spring in their step, while horticulturalists continue to see good growing conditions that are helping to set them up for good returns" Charteris said.

Rabobank chief executive Todd Charteris. Photo: Supplied

But despite the improved confidence in their own businesses, farmers were now more pessimistic about the prospects for the broader agri economy - falling to -25 per cent from -16 percent previously.

Higher prices, lower commodity prices, and rising interest rates were the three major reasons cited for the drop in confidence.

Charteris said Rabobank generally saw the reading for farmers' confidence in their own businesses sitting a little higher than for the broader agri economy, but the two measures do usually move in the same direction.

"So it is a bit unusual to see them taking divergent paths this quarter.

"It is hard to put a finger on why this is the case, but one possible reason might be that farmer concerns about the prospects for New Zealand's overall economy are feeding into pessimism about the prospects for the agri economy - and we did see a few comments in the verbatim responses to the agri economy question that support this view."

Regardless of the reason Charteris said it was clear farmer sentiment remained subdued and had been for an extended period of time.

"Given the importance of the sector to the wider economy, it really is essential that everyone involved with the industry bands together to support the country's food producers and to get things moving in the right direction," he said.