Editorial: Farm Recessions Leave Permanent Scars on Rural Communities

For communities that depend on agriculture as their primary economic engine, the recession is not defined by headlines on Wall Street. It is defined by the quiet disappearance of the businesses that once processed, serviced, and supported the crop.

LUBBOCK, TEXAS (RFD NEWS) — In West Texas cotton country, a farm recession does not begin with a stock market crash. It begins with a gin that does not open.

The Texas High Plains near Lubbock produces roughly 66 percent of the state’s cotton, making it the backbone of the state’s top cash crop. Cotton generates more than $1.6 billion in direct farm receipts and contributes more than $5 billion to the state’s economy. From 2020 through 2022, Texas averaged nearly 5.2 million bales annually.

Then came drought and volatility.

In 2022, extreme drought forced producers to abandon nearly 74 percent of planted acres, driving production to the lowest levels seen in decades. Final 2023 upland production was estimated at 2.7 million 480-pound bales — down 12 percent from the previous year. Production recovered to around 4 million bales in 2024, but that remains well below the earlier three-year average.

That kind of swing is difficult for the infrastructure to absorb.

Cotton gins, equipment dealers, irrigation companies, and trucking firms are built around steady throughput. Their costs — power, insurance, labor, maintenance — do not fall simply because bale counts do. When production declines or margins tighten, fixed costs are spread across fewer bales. Per-unit costs rise. Pressure builds.

Across parts of the High Plains, that pressure is now visible. In Parmer County, one cooperative gin has sold, another is unlikely to reopen, and only one large facility remains. In Motley County, a gin did not operate in 2025 and is reportedly for sale, sending cotton to neighboring counties for processing. In Hale and Lamb counties, cooperatives merged operations and ran a single plant.
The cotton did not disappear. The infrastructure did.

When a gin closes, growers haul farther. Diesel costs increase. Turnaround time lengthens. Seasonal jobs vanish. Local payroll shrinks. Equipment purchases are delayed. Service businesses feel the slowdown. County tax bases soften.

This is what a farm recession looks like on Main Street.

From a national perspective, aggregate farm income numbers may not signal a crisis. Land values in many areas remain firm. Government support programs cushion some of the financial strain. But balance sheets and cash flow are not the same thing.

A producer can have equity in land and still struggle with operating losses. A county can report stable acreage and still lose critical infrastructure. Once a gin closes or a dealership consolidates, reopening is not automatic when prices recover. Skilled labor disperses. Facilities age. Capital requirements grow.

The stress is gradual, not dramatic. It appears as mergers instead of bankruptcies. As “did not open this season” instead of liquidation. As consolidation rather than collapse.

Cotton remains central to the Texas economy. Markets will cycle. Rain will eventually return. But rural infrastructure tends to thin faster than it rebuilds.

For communities that depend on agriculture as their primary economic engine, the recession is not defined by headlines on Wall Street. It is defined by the quiet disappearance of the businesses that once processed, serviced, and supported the crop.

And when those links in the chain weaken, recovery takes more than a better price — it takes rebuilding the backbone of the local economy.

Related Stories
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Friday that imposing duties without Congressional authorization exceeds presidential powers. RealAg Radio host Shaun Haney joins us to discuss the potential trade and agriculture implications of the recent ruling.
The USDA Agricultural Outlook Forum highlights modest price support from tighter supplies across cotton, grains, dairy, livestock, and sugar into 2026.
Farm Bureau Economist Faith Parum discusses the latest Farm Bill proposal and the path ahead for Congress and U.S. agriculture.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order this week to accelerate domestic production of phosphorus and glyphosate, signaling that farm input availability is now treated as a national security risk.
Smaller supplies could support cotton prices despite weak demand.
Biofuel and corn producers await proposal as Renewable Fuels Association pushes for expanded ethanol access.

Tony St. James joined the RFD-TV talent team in August 2024, bringing a wealth of experience and a fresh perspective to RFD-TV and Rural Radio Channel 147 Sirius XM. In addition to his role as Market Specialist (collaborating with Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady to provide radio and TV audiences with the latest updates on ag commodity markets), he hosts “Rural America Live” and serves as talent for trade shows.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

RFD NEWS Markets Specialist Tony St. James reviews the USDA’s Farms and Land in Farms 2025 Summary.
Strong corn exports support prices while soybeans lag yearly pace. However, large carryover stocks limit upside despite solid yields.
Fuel costs ease over the long term, but fertilizer energy remains volatile.
Adequate transportation capacity exists, but fuel costs and soft river demand could widen basis risk.
Slightly higher sales amid shrinking acreage and inventories point to tighter supplies supporting catfish prices.
Winter Weather Shapes Markets and Early Fieldwork Nationwide