The American Farm Bureau Federation announced on March 23 that nationwide Chapter 12 filings were down in 2022 to the lowest point was since 2005, which comes as good news. However, the AFBF said, four regions in the U.S. saw increases in bankruptcies for the year.
Chapter 12 was introduced in bankruptcy law as a “temporary measure” in 1986, an AFBF release said, and became permanent in 2005. “With 169 filings, farm bankruptcies in 2022 were the lowest since Chapter 12 became permanent in 2005,” the release, which can be read at https://www.fb.org/market-intel/farm-bankruptcies-fall-again-in-2022 , said. “This comes just three years after the third-highest number of farm bankruptcy filings – 595 in 2019.”
And it said, “According to data from the U.S. Courts, Chapter 12 bankruptcy filings were down nearly 39 percent from 2021. This is the first time since Chapter 12 became permanent that there were fewer than 200 filings.”
Looking at the filings by region, the AFBF continued, “Despite the overall drop in Chapter 12 bankruptcy filings in 2022, filings were not down in every region in 2022, like they were in 2021. In fact, of the eight regions, four – the Mid-Atlantic, West, Northwest and Other – saw double-digit percentage increases in filings.”
First detailing the areas with a decrease, the AFBF said, “The region with both the largest decrease in Chapter 12 filings by absolute number and the largest percentage decline was the Midwest – Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, North Dakota, Nebraska, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin – which had 47 bankruptcy filings in 2022, down from 144 filings in 2021 – a decrease of 97 filings.
“The Midwest and the Southeast led all regions in the number of filings, each accounting for 28% of all Chapter 12 filings in the U.S.”
And the three other regions with a decline from 2021 to 2022 in filings include the Southeast, Southwest and Northeast.
“While the Southeast remains a top region for Chapter 12 bankruptcies, the region saw an 11 percent reduction in total filings, with 47 in 2022. The Southwest had the second-largest decrease in filings, both in absolute terms and by percentage. In 2022, there were 11 Chapter 12 filings, down from 27 in 2021, a decline of 59 percent. Finally, the Northeast had four filings in 2022, relative to the five filings in 2021.”
The four regions with increases in Chapter 12 filings in 2022. As shown on the graph viewable at https://www.fb.org/imgz/fig-2-032223.JPG , “The region with the largest increase in Chapter 12 filings by absolute number and percentage increase with 12 filings, up from 5 in 2021, was the Other region, which includes Puerto Rico, Alaska, Hawaii, Guam, the Virgin Islands and the District of Columbia.”
The AFBF said, “The Mid-Atlantic (Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia) had an increase of three filings for a total of 26 filings in 2022. The West (California and Nevada) had 11 filings in 2022, up two from 2021.”
And, it said, “Finally, the Northwest (Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Oregon and Washington) also had 11 filings in 2022, up one from 2021.”
Filings by state “vary significantly, from no bankruptcies in 12 states/territories to as many as 16 filings in others,” as shown in the same graph Figure 2.
Alaska, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Guam, Hawaii, North Dakota, New Hampshire, Nevada, Rhode Island, the Virgin Islands, West Virginia and Wyoming had no Chapter 12 bankruptcies filed in the past year. In contrast, five states had Chapter 12 filings in the double digits. New York (16) and Puerto Rico (12) led the nation in Chapter 12 filings in 2022. Florida and Georgia both had 10 filings and California had 11 filings. It is worth noting that 2022 is the first year that Wisconsin has not led the nation in Chapter 12 filings since it earned that terrible distinction in 2016.
As seen in Figure 4 at https://www.fb.org/market-intel/farm-bankruptcies-fall-again-in-2022 , “in 2022 total bankruptcy filings were either down or unchanged from 2021 in most – nearly 80 percent – states and territories. Filings were down in 24 states and 19 states had no change in the number of filings between 2022 and 2021. Bucking the overall trend, 11 states/territories had an increase in the number of filings – New York (16 up from nine), Puerto Rico (12 up from five), Arkansas (seven up from four), California (11 up from nine), Florida (10 up from seven), Louisiana (five up from one), Maryland (two up from zero), Oregon (five up from three), South Dakota (six up from five), Utah (one up from zero) and Washington (three up from one).”
The AFBB summarized, “Overall, in 2022, USDA reports that there were 2,002,700 farms in the U.S., which was down from 2,012,050 in 2021, a loss of 9,350 farms. Chapter 12 farm bankruptcies fell below 200 for the first time and reached the lowest level since the Chapter 12 program was made permanent in 2005.
“2022’s 169 farm bankruptcies are over 70 percent lower than the 599 farm bankruptcies of 2019, just three years before. It is no coincidence that farm bankruptcies in 2019 were higher than in 2022: USDA estimated 2019’s net farm income, a broad measure of farm profitability, of $79 billion was less than half of the 2022 net farm income estimate of $163 billion.”
It continued, “So, while we cheer the second year of declining Chapter 12 filings, we also must keep an eye on the future. USDA’s most recent Farm Sector Income Forecast, released Feb. 7, anticipates a decrease in net farm income for 2023. U.S. net farm income is currently forecast at $137 billion, down 15.9 percent from 2022’s $163 billion.”
And it said, “As our article 2023 USDA Farm Income Forecast Erases 2022 Gains points out, when adjusted for inflation, 2023 net farm income is expected to decrease $30.5 billion (18.2%). Meanwhile, USDA projects that farm and ranch production expenses will continue to increase by 4.1% in 2023, following a record increase in production expenses in 2022.”
The AFBF concluded that it “will point out that while the last two years have brought higher commodity prices for some, it has most certainly brought higher input costs for all; the increasing number of bankruptcies in some states and regions in 2022 highlight these facts. Given the considerable price volatility in the marketplace, declining Chapter 12 filings in 2023 are anything but guaranteed.”