COSTS OF PRODUCING SUGAR BEETS 23
data the average monthly farm wages in Michigan (without board)
were approximately 6 per cent higher in 1921 than in 1922. Adding
5 per cent to the 1922 wage rate, therefore, established the 1921 wage
rate. This same method was followed in all calculations for 1921.
Contract labor rates for 1921 and 1923 were obtained directly
from the farmers visited in the investigation and were checked
against the printed beet contracts for those years, furnished to the
commission by the sugar manufacturers. To these rates were
added the 1922 costs of the minor item of perquisites ® furnished by
the growers to the contract laborers, and also the extra wages, if
any, paid to contract laborers at the rates specified in the 1921 and
1923 contracts for harvesting unusually large crops. For example,
the contract-labor rates per acre were the same in all five areas in
Michigan—$23 in 1921, $18 in 1922, and $23 in 1923. These are
the amounts provided in the contracts with the laborers for the com-
sined handwork of blocking, thinning, hoeing, pulling, and topping
an acre of sugar beets under standard conditions. To obtain the
total costs of contract labor, as shown in the tables, the costs of the
regular work under standard conditions were increased by: (1)
[Extra wages for harvesting an unusually good crop and for extra
hoeings, and (2) the perquisites furnished by the growers to the con-
tract laborers. The latter item averaged in the five areas $1.05 per
acre in 1922. As no additional wages were paid in Michigan either
in 1921 or in 1923 for extra labor in harvesting the beets, the yields
in those vears being lower on the average than in 1922, the contract-
labor costs per acre in Michigan for both 1921 and 1923 were estimated
at $24.05.
Horse costs for 1921 and 1923 were obtained by adjusting the
feed costs, as found in the investigation for 1922, to changes in
prices as shown by the Yearbooks of the United States Department
of Agriculture for these years. Chores and other labor involved in
the care of horses were charged at the new cost rates determined by
the method described above. For the remaining items the 1922
ata were used.
Seed costs per acre for 1921 and 1923 were determined by adjusting
the 1922 seed costs per acre by the percentage of change in price of
seed for each of these years, as compared with the price of seed in 1922.
[n Alma, Mich., for example, the price per pound paid by farmers
for seed in 1922 was 15 cents, while in 1921 it was 25 cents. The 1921
seed cost per acre was therefore 1.66 times the 1922 cost. Prices per
pound of seed were obtained from the farmers in the areas investi-
gated and were checked against the factory-grower contracts.
Commercial fertilizer costs for 1921 oo 1923 were obtained by
adjusting the 1922 fertilizer costs per acre by the percentage of varia-
tion in the market prices of fertilizer for those years. In Michigan
she prices of fertilizer in 1921 and 1923 were, respectively, 15.7 per
ent and 31 per cent higher than in 1922. Consequently the factors
used in multiplying to obtain the 1921 and 1923 costs were 1.157 and
1.31, respectively.
In like manner land charges for 1921 and 1923 were determined by
applying to the 1922 land charges a factor of change based upon the
percentage change in the “value of good plowlands,” as shown in
the 1922 Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture. For example,
} For details see p. 34.