Published: 30 March 2012
Only every third euro of a farmer's income came from agriculture in 2010
In 2010, an average of 32 per cent of a farmer family's income came from the farm, while in 2000 the corresponding share was 37 per cent. The share of agriculture has thus diminished in the income formation of a farmer family. The income share of agriculture varies strongly between farms, however. One third of farmer families were part-time agricultural entrepreneurs in that their income from agriculture was only under five per cent of the owner spouses' total taxable income. Correspondingly, nine per cent of families are full-time farmers so that they received over 95 per cent of their income from agriculture. These data derive from the 2010 statistics on the finances of agricultural and forestry enterprises published by Statistics Finland.
Income of family farms by source of income in 2000 and 2010. The farms are grouped according to the income share of agriculture
Year | Income from agriculture as a share of total income | ||||||||||
All income brackets, total | Percentage share of income subject to state taxation | Under 5% of income from agriculture | Percentage share of income subject to state taxation | 5% to 50% of income from agriculture | Percentage share of income subject to state taxation | 50% to 95 % of income from agriculture | Percentage share of income subject to state taxation | Over 95 % of income from agriculture | Percentage share of income subject to state taxation | ||
Number of farms | 2000 | 70 083 | .. | 16 443 | .. | 25 472 | .. | 22 327 | .. | 5 841 | .. |
2010 | 53 317 | .. | 16 975 | .. | 19 379 | .. | 11 875 | .. | 5 088 | .. | |
Spouses' combined income subject to state taxation EUR | 2000 | 35 235 | 100 | 37 771 | 100 | 37 924 | 100 | 32 646 | 100 | 26 266 | 100 |
2010 | 53 641 | 100 | 57 419 | 100 | 54 444 | 100 | 52 549 | 100 | 40 520 | 100 | |
Spouses' income from agriculture and capital income EUR | 2000 | 13 187 | 37 | 413 | 1 | 8 947 | 24 | 24 149 | 74 | 25 735 | 98 |
2010 | 16 974 | 32 | 544 | 1 | 12 059 | 22 | 38 666 | 74 | 39 875 | 98 | |
Spouses' earned income EUR, total | 2000 | 11 140 | 32 | 20 407 | 54 | 15 449 | 41 | 2 292 | 7 | 80 | 0 |
2010 | 19 569 | 36 | 31 609 | 55 | 23 304 | 43 | 4 594 | 9 | 126 | 0 | |
Spouses' income transfers EUR, total | 2000 | 2 913 | 8 | 4 389 | 12 | 3 431 | 9 | 1 968 | 6 | 105 | 0 |
2010 | 6 081 | 11 | 8 726 | 15 | 6 809 | 13 | 3 643 | 7 | 179 | 0 | |
Spouses' income from forestry EUR, total | 2000 | 3 137 | 9 | 3 120 | 8 | 4 183 | 11 | 2 724 | 8 | 194 | 1 |
2010 | 3 283 | 6 | 3 624 | 6 | 4 067 | 7 | 2 865 | 5 | 139 | 0 | |
Spouses' other income EUR, total | 2000 | 5 147 | 15 | 9 873 | 26 | 6 273 | 17 | 1 681 | 5 | 178 | 1 |
2010 | 8 492 | 16 | 14 277 | 25 | 8 678 | 16 | 3 351 | 6 | 486 | 1 |
The total taxable income of spouses receiving less than five per cent of income from agriculture was, on average, around EUR 57,400, while the combined total income of full-time working spouses receiving over 95 per cent of income from agriculture was nearly EUR 17,000 lower. Differences in total income between these groups are partly explained by the number of income earners from agriculture: the group receiving under five per cent of agricultural income had an average of 1.74 income earners per farm and the group of full-time farmer families 1.50.
The chapter on 'Theme of the statistics' examines the full-time nature of agricultural enterprises, which in part seeks to respond to the proposed revision concerning the European Commission's agricultural policy after 2013. One objective of this proposal is to assign the basic income support for agriculture only to active farmers. To define the activeness of the farm the Commission has put forward as one alternative that at least five per cent of the income of the farm owners should derive from agriculture. The definition sounds easy but its verification in practice is at least challenging. Firstly, the number of farms owned by corporations and limited companies is considerable and their share is constantly growing. How to define corporation owners' income from outside agriculture? Secondly, nowadays small-scale secondary income earning can be combined into income from agriculture. The combination is defended by the fact that small-scale secondary income earning is often practised with means of agricultural production and it would be difficult to separate secondary income. Thirdly, years of crop failure and big investments may temporarily lower income from agriculture below the activeness limit of five per cent. Farms have conventionally acquired additional income from forestry and often forestry has been seen as a lifeline for agriculture. Rarely accomplished large trade in wood could take the farm below the five per cent income limit.
In addition to the Introduction, this publication has four
separate main chapters.
Chapter 2 discusses the results of agricultural enterprises. The
data in the chapter derive from tax forms 2 for farmers and data
obtained by Statistics Finland's own collection. The statistical
population examined in the chapter is formed of all agricultural
entrepreneurs who are subject to the act on the income tax of
agriculture and practise agriculture on a farm included in the farm
register. In 2010 the population defined in Chapter 2 included
59,914 agricultural enterprises, of which 53,327 were managed by
natural persons, 4,384 by corporations subject to taxation and
2,203 by estates. The data are presented as a uniform time series
between 2004 and 2010.
Data in Chapter 3 were obtained from the database of personal
taxation. The population comprises the 53,327 farmers working as
natural persons from the previous chapter and their 38,657 spouses.
The data are summed up by spouse. All data on income other than
from agriculture received by the farmer family are derived from the
personal taxation data. The data are presented in the tables
uniformly from 2000 to 2010.
Chapter 4 deals with forestry. The population intended here is
formed of all those having returned tax forms 2c for forestry,
comprising of 271,326 persons liable to pay tax in 2010. By legal
form 209,922 of these were legal persons, 36,856 property
corporations or those subject to taxation and 24,548 estates. Data
on agricultural entrepreneurs and other forest owners are also
available separately. The smallest area unit in the tables is
municipality. Data on forestry are available for the years
2006-2010.
Source: Statistics on the finances of agricultural and forestry enterprises, Statistics Finland
Inquiries: Hannu Maliniemi 09 1734 2796
Director in charge: Leena Storgårds
Updated 30.3.2012
Official Statistics of Finland (OSF):
Statistics on the finances of agricultural and forestry enterprises [e-publication].
ISSN=2489-320X. 2010. Helsinki: Statistics Finland [referred: 22.11.2024].
Access method: http://www.stat.fi/til/mmtal/2010/mmtal_2010_2012-03-30_tie_001_en.html