About Us 5 Race Strategy Donate Online
For more than ten years, the Oregon government has waged an all-out assault
against Oregon businesses, and we experience the consequences every day.
Government spending has increased by double digits every budget cycle for the past decade. Who has had to pay the bill for this increased spending? Small businesses.
Oregon suffers from highest-in-the-nation unemployment levels. Despite billions of dollars of government spending, unemployment remains at record levels.
State government has demanded that Oregon families and businesses make up the difference between tax receipts and out-of-control spending. Last session, a single day brought over $1 billion in new taxes and fees.
Oregon small businesses are strangled by red tape and bureaucracy. Each year, the government invents new regulations to make running a successful business more expensive and difficult.
Join our PAC in investing in the future of Oregon businesses! Learn more...

U.S. Chamber Updates

Site search

RSS Press Releases

Archives

RSS Daily Quote

Hard times hit Oregon dairy farmers

Ocow-milkregon Small Business Association,
7-11-09,

Oregon dairy farmers are in a bind.  The cost of producing a gallon of milk is higher than what farmers can sell it for.  This has forced dairy famers to live on credit and hope milk prices increase soon to stave off potential bankruptcies.

A number of factors have contributed to the current situation.  Increased cost of production beyond the farmer’s control doesn’t allow farmers to cut costs enough to remain profitable.  It is more expensive to feed cows due to competition from ethanol producers for food stock.

The dairy market in recent years has become a global market.  Prices are down as all dairy exports and demand from other countries has fallen significantly.  United States dairy farmers had been exporting milk into Asian markets as a result of dought in Australia and New Zealand.  Conditions have improved and those industries have partly recovered and are competing again in the Asian market.

In anticipation of increased demand farmers built up herds to meet that demand.  Now with falling prices farmer are stuck with the higher costs of maintain expanded herds and milk production that can’t be easily reduced.

How long will these conditions last?  It is hard to say, changes in the industry and markets have made historical cycles less reliable as predictors of the future.    U.S. milk production went up .01%percent despite having 43,000 less cows in the country from a year ago.