New Zealand farmer confidence slid in the past quarter amid concern about the impact of Mycoplasma bovis cattle disease on the country's agricultural sector, with the number of farmers expecting conditions to improve now only just outweighing those expecting them to worsen, according to the latest Rabobank rural confidence survey.
"The run of strong commodity prices across virtually all sectors continues to support on-farm profitability and farmer optimism, but, despite the positive broad-based returns, the uncertainty in the operating environment means many farmers are wary of what the next 12 months will bring," Hayley Gourley, Rabobank New Zealand general manager for country banking, said in the report.
The number of farmers expecting the rural economy to improve in the next 12 months fell to 26 per cent, from 27 per cent in the last quarter while the number expecting the rural economy to worsen jumped to 24 per cent, from 12 per cent in the previous quarter, according to the quarterly survey, which was completed last month.
Among farmers expecting the agricultural economy to deteriorate, 78 per cent cited Mycoplasma bovis and the consequences of the eradication process as the key reason for holding this view, Gourley noted.
"Government intervention was the second predominant reason for farmer pessimism, however, this was cited far less frequently than in previous quarters," Gourley said.