FFA & Agriculture Statistics
FFA Statistics
Membership
Today (2008), there are 507,763 FFA members, aged 12-21 in 7,439 chapters in all 50 states, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands
41% of FFA members are female; women hold more than 50% of state leadership positions
77% of our membership is Caucasian; 17% is Hispanic and 4% is African-American
89% of FFA members are in grades 9-12; 6% are in grades 7-8; 5% are high school graduates
27% of FFA members live in rural, farm areas; the remainder live in rural non-farm (39%),
urban and suburban areas (34%)FFA chapters are in 11 of the 20 largest cities, including New York, Chicago and Philadelphia
The top five membership states are California, Texas, Georgia, Oklahoma and Ohio
The 75th National FFA Convention was host to 51,338 members, advisors and supporters
Education
More than 11,000 teachers deliver an innovative, cutting-edge and integrated curriculum to students
92% offer agriscience; 71% offer advanced agriscience and biotechnology; 59% offer agricultural mechanics; 49% offer horticulture; 43% offer animal science; and, 24% offer environment-related In 2001, 59% of qualified agricultural education graduates pursued teaching as a career; over 35 agriculture programs closed due to lack of a qualified teacher and 365 agriculture teachers teach in more than one school 23% of teachers have five or fewer years of teaching experience
The shortage of qualified agriculture teachers is the greatest challenge facing FFA and agricultural education
Career Exploration
Members participate in a hands-on work experience allowing them to apply knowledge learned in class
Collectively, FFA members earn $4 billion annually through their hands-on work experience
Members participate and learn advanced career skills in 45 national proficiency areas based on their hands-on work experience ranging from food science and technology to agricultural communications to wildlife management to production agriculture
According to the student magazine readership study, 87% of our students are interested in learning about career exploration, 81% about college preparation and 81% about technology
Through 23 national career development events, such as public speaking, environment and natural resources and meats evaluation and technology, FFA members extend and test their industry knowledge in a variety of career fields
Industry Support
Agriculture is the nation's largest employer, with more than 22 million people working in some phase. FFA prepares members for more than 300 careers in the science, business and technology of agriculture.
National FFA Foundation has raised more than$132 million for the National FFA Organization since 1944.
1,900 sponsors provided more than $8.7 million for FFA and agriculture programs and activities in 2003
FFA scholarships have awarded more than $22 million
1,500 students of agricultural education benefited from FFA Scholarships in 2004
The FFA National Agricultural Career Show covers 260,000 square feet and attracts more than 300 exhibitors
More Statistics
General Agricultural Statistics
Average Annual Employment Opportunities for College Graduates in the Food and Agricultural Sciences, United States, 1995-2000:
Marketing, Merchandising and Sales Representatives 14,353
Scientists, Engineers and Related Specialists 13,922
Managers and Financial Specialists 5,613
Communication and Education Specialists 5,295
Social Service Professionals 4,862
Agricultural Production Specialists 3,873
Today's Farm
Agriculture is the nation's largest employer with more than 22 million people working in some phase-from growing food and fiber to selling it at the supermarket.
There are 2.19 million farms in the United States. The average size of U.S. farms in 1999 was 432 acres.
There are 165,102 farms operated by women in the United States.
Individuals, family partnerships or family corporations own 99% of U.S. farms with fewer than 10 stockholders. Non-family corporations own only 0.4% of America's farms and ranches.
Consumers
Americans spend 10.9% of their income on food, the lowest percentage in the world. India spends 51.3%, Mexico spends 24.5%, South Africa spends 27.5%, Japan spends 17.6%, Italy spends 17.2% and the UK spends 11.2%.
It takes about 40 days for most Americans to earn enough money to pay for their food supply for the entire year. It takes that same American 124 days to earn enough money to pay federal, state and local taxes for the year
The annual per capita consumption of Americans is: 204.5 pounds of milk, 196.8 pounds of flour and cereal products, 186.5 pounds of fresh vegetables, 131.8 pounds of fresh fruits, 115.6 pounds of red meat, 65 pounds of poultry, 65.3 pounds of fats and oils, 28 pounds of cheese, 18.9 pounds of rice and 244 eggs.
International
The United States provides food at a lower cost, as a percentage of income, than any other country in the world. We produce sufficient surplus to be the nations leading exporter.
The United States produces 46% of the world's soybeans, 41% of the world's corn, 20.5% of the world's cotton and 13% of the world's wheat.
The United States exports $49.1 billion in agricultural products annually and imports $37.5 billion. Asia (not including Japan, China or East Asia) imports the most ($10.5 billion) and Russia imports the least ($.46 billion).
Economy
The American farmer regains 20¢ of every dollar in agricultural products sold, 39¢ goes to labor, 6¢ goes to taxes and interest, 8.5¢ goes to packaging and the remainder goes to fuel, electricity, transportation, advertising, etc.
Farm receipts total $208.2 billion dollars each year; most is meat animals ($46,917,000), least is tobacco ($2,308,000).
Technology and Environment
A growing number of farmers and ranchers are using computers and modern technology; 90.7% use a computer, 87.4% own a cellular telephone, 51.3% communicate by fax, 72.2% have access to the Internet and 24.5% make online purchases using e-commerce.
As of May 2000, farmers enrolled 31.4 million acres of their land in the Conservation Reserve Program to protect the environment and provide habitat for wildlife. Farmers and ranchers provide food and habitat for 75% of the nation's wildlife.
Erosion rate by water on U.S. croplands has been reduced by 24% in the last 18 years.
Only 2 labor hours and one acre of land required to produce 100 bushels of corn, with farmer using a tractor, 5-bottom plow, 25-foot plow, 25-foot tandem disk, planter, 25-foot herbicide applicator, 15-foot self-propelled combine and trucks.
*All information gathered from the American Farm Bureau Federation, "Farm Facts" booklet, updated 2000.
For additional information on Agricultural Science Education, please visit Team Ag Ed.