WASHINGTON, D.C. (RFD-TV) — Farmers are receiving only pennies of each dollar consumers spend on traditional Thanksgiving foods, according to the National Farmers Union (NFU_ annual report, “Farmer’s Share of the Food Dollar.” Despite elevated grocery prices, the share going back to the people who grow and raise the food remains strikingly low. NFU says decades of consolidation in food processing, transportation, retail, and input markets have left family farmers with little leverage, while consumers continue facing high prices with few competitive alternatives.
The 2025 figures reveal wide disparities between retail prices and the prices farmers ultimately receive. Turkey producers receive just six cents per pound on a $2.49 retail price — barely 2.4% of the consumer dollar. Producers earn 1.3% of the value of boxed stuffing, 2% of dinner rolls, and just 10% of pumpkin puree.
Even where farmers capture a larger share — such as cranberries at nearly 32% or green beans at 25% — the absolute returns remain small. NFU argues these gaps illustrate how corporate control throughout the supply chain erodes both farmer profitability and consumer affordability.
The organization’s Fairness for Farmers campaign continues calling for stronger antitrust enforcement, greater transparency, and more competitive markets. NFU President Rob Larew says fixing the structural imbalance benefits everyone: fair prices for farmers and lower prices for families at the grocery store.
Farm-Level Takeaway: Low farmer shares reflect deep consolidation across the food chain, keeping producer returns thin even as retail food prices remain high.
Tony St. James, RFD-TV Markets Specialist
Consumer demand for regional food systems is strong, but the challenge lies in scaling production and infrastructure to meet that growing need.
October 03, 2025 02:57 PM
·
Dave Kestel, a farmer from Will County and member of the Illinois Farm Bureau, joins us to share a boots-on-the-ground update on the 2025 corn harvest.
October 03, 2025 02:30 PM
·
Approximately 42,000 birds were affected in the outbreak, officials said.
October 03, 2025 10:50 AM
·
Beef demand could be influencing other economic sectors, as consumers adjust spending habits to prioritize higher-priced beef products.
October 02, 2025 01:39 PM
·
AFBF Economist Bearnt Nelson joins us with insights into current turkey flock sizes, HPAI concerns, and production impacts on holiday demand.
October 02, 2025 01:25 PM
·
“It, all of a sudden, says that tracking and fighting hunger is not a priority, apparently, at the federal level.”
October 02, 2025 01:22 PM
·
In a final rule published in the Federal Register, the Department states that it will no longer base wage rates on the Farm Labor Survey.
October 02, 2025 11:20 AM
·
USDA’s report shows wheat strength overall, with winter wheat yields setting records, while spring wheat and rye saw declines. Oats and barley remain constrained by record-low acreage despite stable or rising yields.
October 01, 2025 04:24 PM
·
Bigger-than-expected corn and wheat stocks are bearish for prices, while soybean figures were neutral. Farmers may face additional price pressure as harvest accelerates.
October 01, 2025 04:02 PM
·