NRCS Economics in Pennsylvania
Economic principles must be applied in the planning, implementation, and evaluation of agency policies and program activities to provide the most cost-effective assistance to customers, cooperators, and partners for the sustained use of natural resources.
National Resources
- USDA Office of the Chief Economist
- USDA Agricultural Marketing Service – USDA Market News
- USDA Risk Management Agency
- USDA National Agricultural Library
Pennsylvania Resources
- Penn State Cooperative Extension
- Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture
- Pennsylvania Agricultural Statistics - USDA NASS
- U.S. Census of Agriculture – Pennsylvania
- Pennsylvania Economics State Resources
The policy of the Natural Resources Conservation Service is that economics is an essential consideration in all agency decision making. Economic principles must be applied in the planning, implementation, and evaluation of agency policies and program activities to provide the most cost-effective assistance to customers, cooperators, and partners for the sustained use of natural resources.
- Economic principles and techniques, including cost effectiveness, economic feasibility, and benefit-cost analysis will be applied to all program formulation, management, and evaluation activities of the agency.
- Economic effects of alternative actions should be provided to NRCS customers in order for them to make informed resource conservation decisions. NRCS policy permits cost effectiveness analysis, partial budgeting, profitability analysis, and other appropriate analyses when requested by the client. NRCS policy prohibits field offices from obtaining financial information beyond that volunteered by the client. Therefore, NRCS economic analyses utilize estimates using public and private sources. The above list includes both National and State resources available and that may be helpful in such analyses.
- For nationwide consistency in the application of economics in all NRCS activities, the National Resource Economics Handbooks and other directives will be used as the guidance for the integration of economics into conservation planning, program implementation, and program evaluation at the field, state, regional, and national offices of the agency.
Economic principles and techniques shall be used at all levels of the agency in order to satisfy the goal of maximizing environmental benefits per dollar expended as legislated for selected U.S. Department of Agriculture conservation programs.