a national information resource for value-added agriculture
Agricultural Marketing Resource Center

Rural Development

Rural America has been in a state of decline for most of the 20th century.  Due to dwindling profit margins and capital intensive farming methods, production agriculture has gone through a protracted period of declining farm numbers and loss of farm families to urban areas.

Rural towns created to provide goods and services to farm families have lost their economic reason to exist.  While some rural towns have transitioned to non-farm economic activities, most have not.  As farm numbers decline and town populations dwindle, most farm and town communities are decaying with many ceasing to exist.

Over recent decades, public policy has focused on programs to revitalize rural America.  Although these programs may have stemmed the decline, they have not reversed the long-term trend.  The value-added agriculture movement is being called upon by many of our state and national leaders to revitalize rural America.  The premise is that value-added agriculture business creation can bring economic activity to rural communities.  So public sector programs are being designed to stimulate value-added business development.

For more information on this topic, see the links listed below of articles posted on related Web sites.

Understanding Rural Affairs

  • New Governance for New Rural Economy -- Center for the Study of Rural America, Kansas Federal Reserve Bank – A growing chorus of rural leaders agree that new opportunities are on the horizon for rural America.
  • Can Rural America Support a Knowledge Economy -- Center for the Study of Rural America, Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank – Knowledge has become the new premium fuel for economic growth in the 21st century.
  • The Rural/Urban Conflict – Purdue University Extension -- In many areas, retail centers, business parks, housing developments, and agricultural land all share the same landscape, blurring the lines between "urban" and "rural." As the urban and rural "cultures" begin to co-mingle, conflicts can arise.

Economic Development of Rural Areas

Rural Policy

 

USDA Rural DevelopmentPartially Funded by USDA Rural Development
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