New survey showing increased internet connectivity among farmers

New survey showing increased internet connectivity among farmers

Friday, August 21st 2015

The majority of farmers and ranchers now have computer and Internet access, and the number of connected producers continues to grow. That’s the key outtake from a new survey, Farm and Computer Usage and Ownership, released this week by USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service. According to the survey, 70 percent of U.S. producers report having access to the Internet, a 3 percent jump from 2013, the previous edition of the biennial survey. Some 73 percent of farms reported having access to a computer, up from the 71 percent figure in 2013. The news could be seen as a spur to USDA efforts to move some of the record keeping and customer service efforts of the Farm Service Agency and Natural Resources Conservation Service online rather than through in-person office visits. Those efforts could lead to streamlined information reporting at FSA and NRCS offices across the country and eliminate the need for office visits by farmers to certify their data. Last month at a hearing of the House Agriculture Committee, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said FSA was working on improving the MIDAS (Modernize and Innovate the Delivery of Agricultural Systems) project, which could facilitate online access to FSA programs for producers. NRCS has an online component, Gateway, which it calls “a one stop source for environmental and natural resources data.” Vilsack said FSA is working with NRCS to utilize the Gateway system. In the survey, 43 percent of producers reported using computers for farm business compared to 40 percent in 2013. Economic success also appears to be a role in computer ownership and Internet access. 85 percent of farms in the sales class of $250,000 or more reported having access to a computer and 82 percent have Internet access. Larger farms also use their computers for farm business at a much greater clip than the average farm; 73 percent of farms in the $250,000 or more sales class use their computer for farm business, 30 percentage points higher than the average. The survey is based on responses from about 28,000 agricultural operations from all sizes and types of farms.

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