NDSU Extension Ag Finance Specialist Bryon Parman believes it will take time to work through the current supply chain shortages. “There’ll probably be some relief by next year, but I don’t see any relief before planting.” This has been a perfect storm with disruptions at every stage of the supply chain. “When you have bottlenecks at every single stage of the process to get product to its final destination, it just keeps increasing costs over and over again.”
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