This Is AuburnElectronic Theses and Dissertations

Growth, Stability, and Resilience in U.S. Farm Income

Date

2025-11-20

Author

Zaman, Azaz

Type of Degree

PhD Dissertation

Department

Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology

Abstract

This dissertation investigates the effects of government payments, extreme weather events, and renewable energy expansion on U.S. farm income. Chapter 1 assesses the impact of two major federal programs—the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) and the Federal Crop Insurance Program—on the stability and resilience of market-based farm income, excluding government payments. Chapter 2 analyzes the distributional effects of extreme heat on farm profitability across U.S. counties using recentered influence function regressions. Chapter 3 examines how the expansion of wind and solar energy influences the stability and resilience of market-based farm income. The study utilizes over 50 years of farm income and expenditure data, incorporating various key explanatory variables, and employs various econometric techniques, including two-stage least squares, unconditional quantile regression, probit models with instrumental variables, and panel fixed effects models. The collective findings have important policy implications, particularly for Farm Bill Titles I (Commodities), II (Conservation), IX (Energy), and XI (Crop Insurance).