This is a good readhttp://tinyurl.com/22cz64Someone smarter than me in the ways of economics, tell me what effect removing farm subsidies will have on people. Will farmers suddenly go bankrupt? Will the country get healthier?
4/27/2007 11:58:43 AM
The problem with farms is that unlike other industries, a farmer cannot control his output. A normal company would achieve the price point of P=MC (in a perfectly competitive market). Farmers face a competitive market, but cannot adjust their outcome, if it's a bad harvest, it's great for the farmer as he only has to gather a few of his products and sell them for a huge amount (as all the other farmers most likely had a bad harvest as well). Now if it's a good season, the farmer is in trouble. He now has more product than he can gather, and would have to hire additional help to gather it all, but the price of the resource gathered doesn't justify the cost of gathering it (as all the other farmers had too much produce as well). This is why you used to see farmers burning food on a good harvest.Government subsidies help to try and allieviate this problem by buying the excess off a good harvest and selling it on a bad harvest. That's at least the idea, I don't really know if this has become perverted, but it would seem like the perishable foods could control their output thus should not be subject to subsidies.
4/27/2007 1:13:35 PM
As usual, Kris is a century or so late in his analysis. Back then farmers had no choice but to self-insure their crops, planting in hopes of getting a good price. Back then most home owners had no choice but to self-insure their houses (insurance was only available in urban areas). But times have changed, today we have a very extensive and deep risk market capable of alleviating most risks faced by individuals, from home owners to farmers. Many financial service companies offer product insurance, shifting the price risk from the farmer to the bank. Similarly, futures markets have opened, and when combined with financial institutions such as hedge funds, enables farmers to sell their estimated output even before planting. As for the original post, while farm subsidies are huge, $23 billion or so, it is a tiny fraction of the overall business which is hundreds of billions. As it is, eliminating the subsidies would have a minimal impact. Most damage is done by import quotas which make sugarcane prohibitively expensive. If you want to see economic disruption the eliminate these quotas and watch the price of sugar drop 90%, bankrupting all the corn syrup makers, and American consumers coming to terms with different tastes and cheaper candy.[Edited on April 27, 2007 at 1:41 PM. Reason : .,.]
4/27/2007 1:39:41 PM
What I don't get, is how for the given amount of calories, candy is always more dense than fresh fruit and veggies...and somehow manages to cost less, too. That defies physics to me.
4/27/2007 2:16:33 PM
^plus it tastes better
4/27/2007 2:19:27 PM
4/27/2007 2:32:26 PM
4/27/2007 2:37:28 PM
4/27/2007 4:10:48 PM
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4/27/2007 4:41:00 PM
4/27/2007 4:58:28 PM
I spent a summer in a poultry plant. Is that good enough?
4/27/2007 4:59:07 PM
^^ I'm talking about crop insurance, I assumed that is what Lonesnark referenced. Since you replied to him, I assumed you ment what he was talking about. ^ and ^^ I think that one summer gives you a good background in what it takes to produce the food supply, and that's a lot more than most. Of course, I realize that in a specialized economy we can't all have in depth knowledge of every product's production. I think that a lot of disagreements that exist today are simply a result of poor general education. Math, economics, physics, chemistry, biology, business; basic awareness of all these would raise the level of discourse around here emensly.
4/27/2007 6:30:26 PM
4/27/2007 7:20:41 PM
4/27/2007 8:38:06 PM
4/27/2007 8:41:43 PM
what about mine loneshark?
4/27/2007 8:49:46 PM
4/27/2007 8:53:58 PM
there is something inherently wrong in this country when two hamburgers from mcdonalds cost the same or less than two tomatoes from the grocery store[Edited on April 27, 2007 at 11:54 PM. Reason : .]
4/27/2007 11:54:06 PM
4/28/2007 12:11:02 AM
4/28/2007 12:19:44 AM
The tariffs/quotas on sugar are absolutely insane.We waste a ridiculous amount of money. For each job in the sugar industry we protect it costs us about $270,000 per year.We could remove the quota and tell every single worker in the industry to sit at home and watch Opera while giving them a $260,000/year severance check and our economy would be better off.
4/28/2007 12:18:21 PM
4/28/2007 2:22:11 PM
4/28/2007 5:21:36 PM
4/28/2007 5:55:26 PM
4/28/2007 6:22:34 PM
4/29/2007 12:26:26 AM
4/29/2007 1:14:38 AM
http://tinyurl.com/27bfnzLets buy all our wheat from China.
4/29/2007 4:30:13 AM
4/29/2007 10:07:20 AM
4/29/2007 5:54:01 PM
The farmer's would go bankrupt and end up selling their land to some Rural housing community. But, this wouldn't be nothing because an increasing population could eat more of someone else's farm!The sad part is I'm surprised people going to nc state don't know this.
4/29/2007 6:18:01 PM
4/29/2007 11:20:31 PM
What's you point? That farms sometimes shut down? Shit, proven beyond a doubt. So what? My point was that today's financial markets have a long array of mechanisms to prevent food shortage from developing, regardless of how many farms shutdown. In addition to speculative production we have futures markets to direct investment towards potentially scarce products, product substitution to shift consumption away from scarce products, and price rationing to eliminate wasteful uses of scarce products. None of which you have argued against, so your point cannot be that such mechanism are ineffective; otherwise you would have said so. [Edited on April 30, 2007 at 12:20 AM. Reason : .,.]
4/30/2007 12:16:32 AM
4/30/2007 1:56:30 AM
4/30/2007 8:36:23 AM
4/30/2007 8:56:01 AM
4/30/2007 8:58:42 AM
I see no evidence, not even a single argument, to be gleamed from your post. I assume you have some evidence or perhaps just an argument as to why we should accept your statements as fact when they are contradicted by the reasoned arguments of others?
4/30/2007 10:53:22 AM
You've yet to provide evidence for anything you've posted.But I'll go ahead and startThe Agricultural Acts (http://www.nationalaglawcenter.org/assets/farmbills/glossary.html) provides subsidies for far more than 4 commodities.
4/30/2007 12:14:19 PM
who said four? I said there were only five which received enough subsidies to have a measurable impact upon the market. Even then, quite a bit goes to pay people not to farm on land they wouldn't be farming anyway (they've already built housing developments, shopping malls, etc). So, give me a reasoned arguments as to why all the mechanisms I have mentioned are insufficient to feed American citizens?
4/30/2007 1:24:39 PM
4/30/2007 1:49:31 PM
4/30/2007 2:10:18 PM
I love anything Pollan writes
4/30/2007 4:11:57 PM
4/30/2007 5:34:58 PM
how many times is he going to have to say the same thing over and over before you understand it.I dont think you're even reading his posts.How could you have possibly missed the ones addressing the futures markets?
4/30/2007 6:01:50 PM
futures markets falls into the same category as any others because it increases cost
4/30/2007 6:05:28 PM
4/30/2007 6:35:14 PM