However, while the 50 per cent fall in the GlobalDairyTrade price index this year has hogged the headlines, some of our other commodities have actually been holding up pretty well.
According to ANZ's commodity price index, meat and wool prices are up 19 per cent this year and 32 per cent over the past two years. Apple and kiwifruit prices are up 11 per cent compared with two years ago; log prices and seafood prices have risen 12 per cent.
Also, these price movements are all quoted in global terms so the general weakness we have seen in the New Zealand dollar over recent months would have added further to these gains.
None of these commodities compare with dairy in terms of their contribution to total merchandise exports, with meat a distant second at 11 per cent. Logs and wood represent 8 per cent, fish is 3 per cent and wool a little under 2 per cent.
However, put these four categories together and they add up to almost a quarter of the total, not far from the dominant dairy sector's 28 per cent.
Maybe this is one reason why we're still seeing reasonable economic growth across the country, despite the sharp falls in dairy prices. It could also explain why the dollar has held up better than dairy price movements suggest it should have.
While many parts of the country will feel the brunt of the inevitable belt-tightening that will follow a lower dairy payout, there will be others where a more diversified set of export commodities will see them perform reasonably well.
Regions like Hawkes Bay, Gisborne, Nelson and the Bay of Plenty are probably seeing some robust under-the-radar performances for a number of key commodities.
The dairy sector is, and always will be, a driver of economic growth and our future outlook.
But it's definitely not the only game in town.
Mark Lister is head of private wealth research at Craigs Investment Partners His disclosure statement is available on www craigsip com. This column is general in nature and should not be regarded as specific investment advice.