Farm Incomes in Scotland 2006/07

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INTRODUCTION

Background

This report contains the latest financial results from the Farm Accounts Survey ( FAS) relating to the farming years 2005/06 and 2006/07. The information is collected annually for the Rural and Environment Research and Analysis Directorate ( RERAD) of the Scottish Government ( SG), by the Scottish Agricultural College ( SAC) and individual records are submitted anonymously to RERAD. The results are used to aid administrative and policy decisions and RERAD is very grateful to the participating farmers for their continued co-operation with SAC and for the detailed information that they provide.

Changes to the farm accounts survey sample

The farm income estimates are produced from an analysis that relates to two samples of farms of 485 in 2005/06 and 458 in 2006/07, representing full-time farms of all of the main types in Scotland (excluding horticulture, specialist pigs and poultry farms). The majority of farms participated in both years, although there was a decrease in the number of responses in 2006/07 which introduces some sample variability into the results when considering annual trends.

Reliability of Results

The quality of information collected from each farm is very high, based on fully reconciled farm accounts. Data for each farm is also validated against a comprehensive set of quality assurance checks. Some information on non-cash items, such as input of family labour, is estimated. The survey has been designed to be representative at the national level; however results by each of the eight farm types reported by the survey ought to be treated with some caution, especially when based on small sample sizes.

Update to 2005/06 results

This report contains an update to the 2005/06 results published last year. This update is mainly due to the availability of a further eleven farm account records for 2005/06, which were not available at the time of publication last year.

The Time Period Covered by the Survey

The survey is not carried out on a calendar-year basis but based on farms' financial years. The exact period covered by the survey, for any given year, will vary across the sample depending on individual businesses' accounting year ends, although they all centre on the same cropping period (see diagram in Annex 1). For example, the 2006/07 accounts all centre on the 2006 production and subsidy year. The spread of closing valuation dates from the autumn of one year to the spring of the next and means that (unavoidably) some of the 2006/07 accounts relate to the 2005 winter whilst others relate to that of 2006.

Measures of Income

The main income measure reported is Net Farm Income ( NFI). NFI is defined as the returns to the farmer and spouse for their manual and managerial labour, and for the tenant-type assets invested by them in the business (see flow-chart in Annex 2). It is before the deduction of any interest payments. All farms are assumed to be tenanted in order to put them on the same basis when assessing their performance, and so an appropriate rent has been imputed and charged on owner occupied holdings. The principal advantage of NFI as an indicator is that it can be compared across all farms as it takes account of the different tenure, labour supply and finance arrangements of different farms. Machinery depreciation is calculated on current values and breeding livestock stock appreciation is excluded from NFI in accordance with established practice.

NFI is a narrower income measure than the aggregate-level Total Income From Farming ( TIFF) estimate, and as a consequence the annual percentage change in NFI is more volatile, especially at relatively low levels of income.

Other income measures reported include Net Profit, Cash Income and Occupier's Net Income. Part II of the Appendix contains definitions of accounting terms.

Public Consultation on Measures of Farm Income

The Scottish Government undertook a public consultation on farm income measures between November 2006 and February 2007, publishing a final response on the 18 th September 2007. This response along with all other consultation documents is available at the following web address:

http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Agriculture-Fisheries/Consultation

The main conclusion from this consultation is to replace Net Farm Income with a new measure called Farm Business Income ( FBI), which will better reflect actual incomes of farm businesses. Estimates Farm Business Income of are currently under development and will be published as soon as they are available.

The public consultation also concluded that although Farm Business Income will replace Net Farm Income as the headline farm business measure, although estimates of Net Farm Income will continue to be published, at least in the medium term.

NOTES

1. Due to rounding, sub-totals in the tables may not exactly equal the sum of the component items.

2. Some of the size groups contain only small numbers of farms, and the results may not be very reliable. Results are not shown for size-groups of fewer than five. Where this is the case the symbol "is used.

Page updated: Tuesday, April 29, 2008