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What Is This Indicator, and Why Is It Important?
This indicator reports the amount of inputs used to produce
one unit of output, with 1975 as the base year. So, for any
input, the index value for a given year describes whether
more or less of that input was used to produce a unit of output
in that year than in 1975. The indicator also reports agricultural
outputs over time, again compared to the output in 1975.
This is a very broad analysis. For example, all fertilizers
used on U.S. farms were divided by all agricultural outputseven
if different amounts of fertilizer were used to produce each
commodity. Agricultural production is driven by physical inputs
and by the knowledge and skill of farmers, plant breeders,
and others. A decreasing input index results because the input
is used more efficiently by farmers (e.g., less fertilizer
per ton of corn due to targeted application), or because of
a series of advances (e.g., less labor required because of
increased mechanization and more effective pesticides). Because
inputs are often expensive and, like pesticides and fertilizers,
may have environmental consequences, input trends are an important
indicator of the long-term health of the agricultural enterprise
and the level of its environmental impact.
What Do the Data Show? The output of U.S.
agriculture has been increasing steadily since 1950, with
total output growing by more than 60% since 1975. At the
same time, farmers have used fewer inputs of energy, labor,
durable goods (tractors, etc.), fertilizer, and land; since 1975, these
amounts have declined by between 40 and 60%. The amount of pesticides
used has increased since the 1950s, but it has remained at about the
same level—about 40% over 1975 levels—since 1978.
Discussion As technology and farming practices
change, inputs can change considerably. For example, a pound
of pesticides today provides far more pest control than did
the same amount 30 years ago. For this reason, this indicator
relies upon a complex analysis of the quantities and quality
of inputs used (see the technical note). A similar analysis
was used for outputs, because they cannot simply be added
together (a pound of strawberries is not equal to a pound
of corn).
The indicator focuses on a few major, quantifiable, inputs.
This means that some factors, such as changes in plant breeding
(including the introduction of genetically engineered crops),
are not addressed at all, and some inputs, such as water,
are addressed only indirectly (in this case, through the energy
costs associated with irrigation).
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