State's farm economy struggles in uncertainty 'Dragging' prices, tariff woes and 'very weak' equipment sales: Nebraska ag economy struggling
That's the picture painted this week by the September report from the Rural Mainstreet Index (RMI), a survey of rural bank CEOs compiled by
The monthly survey gathers the perspectives of rural bank CEOs in 10 states whose economies are dependent in part on agriculture or energy.
The RMI produces a reading from 0 to 100, with scores over 50 representing economic growth. The overall 10-state reading dropped from 48.1 in August to 38.5 in September. The
September was the seventh month so far in 2025 where the overall number fell below the "growth-neutral" threshold of 50.
The gloomy regional picture is not new this year. The overall reading in
Economic performance in the region was strong in 2022 but has declined every year since then and is on track to decline again in 2025 as corn and soy bean prices remain low and farm equipment sales remain "very weak."
Agricultural commodity prices have been "dragging, dragging, dragging," Goss told
"What the farmers are doing is going and relying on used equipment," he added. "Relying on repairs to current equipment, and replacement of parts on current equipment."
Goss said he thinks tariffs are having a "moderate" impact on the rural economy, adding to farmers' anxiety against a backdrop when they've already been struggling.
"It was weak last year at the time as well," Goss said. "The problem is this time there's the uncertainty, more uncertainty than you had last year. The uncertainty stems from the president's tariffs."
Goss said
President
"He negotiated the deal with TikTok, I guess, but that probably doesn't help agriculture," Goss said. "We'll have to wait and see."
Farmers' reluctance to buy new equipment continues to show up in regional economic data, with rural bank executives seeing tariffs weighing significantly on farmers' plans.
Almost 75% of bankers surveyed reported that tariffs are having a "modest negative" (46%) or "significant negative" (27%) impact on farming operations. Only 4% said tariffs were having a "modest positive" impact.
An overwhelming majority of bankers - 92% - said they think the
Republican lawmakers in agriculture-centric states have taken different approaches when discussing tariffs' impact on farmers and ranchers.
Sens.
Ricketts, however, has talked in recent weeks about wanting the administration to wrap up its trade negotiations soon.
Asked by
"I think generally, the economy is very strong," he said. "Certainly, the farm economy in
Ricketts said he sees a lot of things going right in the economy.
"But I think we need, for example to get these trade deals wrapped up, let the benefits of the One Big Beautiful Bill start taking effect, and we should see the economy really start getting much stronger."
Sen.
"We've got this farm crisis now, and this President should deal with this farm crisis right now," Grassley told
"Putting 50 percent tariffs on things that have steel in them, when you can't buy those things in



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