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Washington: United States Department Of Agriculture. National
Agricultural Statistics Service. United States Government
printing office, 1968. — 653 p.
Agricultural Statistics is published
each year to meet the diverse needs for a reliable reference
book on agricultural production, supplies, consumption,
facilities, costs, and returns. Its tables of annual data cover
a wide variety of facts in forms suited to most common use.
Inquiries concerning more current or
more detailed data, past and prospective revisions, or the
statistical methodology used should be addressed directly to
the agency credited with preparing the table. Most of the data
were prepared or compiled in the U.S. Department of
Agriculture. A few tables were prepared in other Government
agencies.
The historical series in this volume
have been generally limited to data beginning with 1954 or 1955
or the most recent 10 years. However, many of the series carry
a reference in the source note to the table in Agricultural
Statistics, 1967, where comparable data for earlier years can
be found. In the 1967 issue, historical tables showing totals
for the United States begin with 1866 for the principal crops
and with 1867 for January 1 livestock numbers, and most other
basic tables showing national totals begin with 1929, 1934,
1939, or 1944 (livestock and poultry tables 1 year later)
depending in part on the relative need for a long series.
These two publications should provide
data for enough years to meet the needs of most users.
Agricultural data for Alaska and
Hawaii are included in the appropriate tables, where available.
Certain statistics for these two States are found in chapter
XIV.
U.S. foreign agricultural trade
statistics include Government as well as non-Government
shipments of merchandise from the United States and Territories
to foreign countries. They do not include U.S. shipments to the
U.S. Armed Forces abroad for their own use or shipments between
the States and U.S. Territories. The world summaries of
production and
trade of major farm products are prepared by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture from reports of the U.S. Department
of Commerce, official statistics of foreign governments, other
foreign source materials, reports of U.S. Agricultural Attaches
and Foreign Service Officers, and the result of office
research.
Three types of data are included in
this volume. Statistics presented in many of the tables
represent actual counts of the items covered. Most of the
statistics relating to foreign trade and to Government
programs, such as numbers and amounts of loans made to farmers,
and amounts of loans made by the Commodity Credit Corporation,
etc., are data of this type.
A large number of other tables, however, contain data that are
estimates made by the Department of Agriculture, which in many
cases are supplemented by a third type of data obtained in
census enumerations.
The estimates for crops, livestock,
and poultry made by the U.S. Department of Agriculture are
prepared mainly to give timely current State and national
totals and averages. They are based on data obtained by sample
surveys of farmers and of people who do business with farmers.
The survey data are supplemented by
information from the Censuses of Agriculture taken every 5
years and check data from various sources.
Being estimates, they are subject to
revisions as more data become available from commercial or
Government sources. Unless otherwise indicated, the totals for
the United States shown in the various tables on acreage,
production, numbers, price, value, supplies, and disposition
are based onofficial Department estimates. They exclude States
for which no official estimates are compiled.
For census years, many tables carry
both census totals and this Department's estimates. Generally,
where there are appreciable differences between the census
totals and this Department's final estimates, the processes of
checking and revising estimates have indicated that some
sources provide more nearly complete information about some
items than the census has been able to obtain. For example,
this Department's estimates of tobacco production can be
considered more precise than census totals, because the
estimates are revised in line with actual production as shown
independently by Internal Revenue records and State records of
tobacco sales. Sugarbeet and sugarcane production and acreage
estimates are adjusted to quantities actually reported by sugar
factories. Check information on peanuts and rice is available
from processors for areas sometimes including several States.
In a number of other instances allowances have been made for
known incompleteness of coverage by the census.
For livestock and poultry, the
Department's estimates of inventory numbers relate to
January
1. Most recent censuses have not enumerated numbers on that
date. The 1945 Census was taken as of January 1, but with the
trying wartime conditions, was delayed over a considerable
length of time in a number of States with the result that
reported inventory numbers did not always represent the actual
January 1 inventory. The 1950 Census was taken as of April 1,
the 1954 and 1959 Censuses were taken in October and November,
and the 1964 Census was taken in November and December. These
situations have made it necessary to adjust census totals to a
January 1 equivalent basis, taking into account changes that
occurred between the January 1 date and the actual date of
enumeration.
Chapters:
Introduction.
Grain and feed.
Cotton, tobacco, sugar, crops, and honey.
Oilseeds, fats and oils.
Vegetables and melons.
Fruits, tree nuts, and horticultural specialties.
Hay, seeds, and minor field crops.
Cattle, hogs, and sheep.
Dairy and poultry statistics.
Farm resources, income, and expenses.
Taxes, insurance, credit, and cooperatives.
Stabilization and price-support programs.
Agricultural conservation and forestry statistics.
Consumption and family living.
Miscellaneous agricultural statistics.
Index.