US farms aren't particularly efficient. Indeed, they are heavily subsidised. Most food consumed in the US comes from outside the country.
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What is the secret behind the success of American agriculture? How is 1% of the population able to feed the entire nation and export? What technologies and economic organizations make American farms so efficient? Why is the technology and org so complex that it has been unable to be adapted to conditions in Latin America and East Asia? To what extent to other parts of the 1st world also use these advanced techniques?
US farms aren't particularly efficient. Indeed, they are heavily subsidised. Most food consumed in the US comes from outside the country.
most food produced in the US is either destroyed or dumped in the ocean. That is hardly efficiency in action.
It may not be economically efficient, but it certainly demonstrates production efficiency. The amount of production generated is huge compared to the economic inputs like labor, land, and energy. OP probably meant to ask what makes US farming so productive.
Source?
The U.S. has a trade surplus in agricultural products.
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i think there is confusion between food produced within America and food produced by its companies. Many american companies work offshore.
So about which one are we talking about then?
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What confusion? You're saying that if an American company produces something overseas, then ships it into the United States, that it is not "imported?" That's not a standard definition. Ordinarily in economic terms, an import is classified as a good that is not produced locally, regardless of by whom it was produced.
EDIT: And why does it even matter? Even if you were correct that foreign American-operated farms contribute to the trade surplus, the question as to why American farming is so productive still stands - in fact, even more so.
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Je suis Marxiste, tendance Groucho
As to the answer: it is capitalism that has caused this.
Food production is a commodity market. For the most part, wheat is wheat is wheat. Eggs are eggs are eggs. There's very little differentiation that can be done among producers (though attempts, such as organically-produced or cruelty-free products, have been made.) As a result, the farmer who wishes to increase his profits has three things he can do: increase overall demand, decrease overall supply, or lower costs (since a commodity price is constantly pressured to the cost of production.)
Decreasing the overall supply is almost impossible, because there are too many other participants in the market to be able to have a sizable effect by restricting output.
Increasing the overall demand is more feasible, by researching new ways that existing commodities can be used. For example, the demand for corn has increased as fuel production from corn becomes more practical. This is still relatively difficult, however, and ends up benefiting competitors as much as oneself. Voluntary agricultural sector consortiums are usually the most effective at this kind of work.
The easiest way from the farmer's perspective is to reduce costs so that his own costs are less than the market price. Every edge in efficiency is explored, and new methods developed, so as to use the fewest possible amounts of labor, energy, and land resources (automatically prioritizing areas most valuable to society). Of course, any given innovation in cost reduction will eventually be disseminated to the rest of the producers, and the advantage will eventually be lost as the market price pushes toward the new, lower cost of production, necessitating further research and development. This relentless, unending focus on cost reduction has made farming very efficient and very productive, and it was all done for the profit.
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Je suis Marxiste, tendance Groucho
I didn't know they dumped it as sea. What about giving it to those in Third World nations? And yes, I know they're capitalists, but surely even capitalists would allow that.
Well obviously because European wheat isn't very good for making bread so it mostly comes from America. Givent he amount of bread consumed in Europe that alone will account for America's surplus.
But America doesn't produce to that kind of degree in all agricultural fields, does it? Like other Western countries it imports most of its food.
It's not hard to see why that could cause more harm than good.
For one, it totally obliterates the ability of their own, local farmers to make a living on their own farms. As a result, they actually lose whatever of their own ability to support themselves that they might already have had, making them even more dependent on the first world and less independent than before.
For two, unless there are safeguards in place to ensure that the food actually gets to the people, all it does is empower and enrich the local authority, which, in many third-world countries, is the most ruthless, brutal warlord. Handing wealth and power to these people can only result in horrible, eminently foreseeable tragedy.
Of course, in some cases food aid is more beneficial than not, and even with the wastage, the U.S. donates about as much food all by itself as every other country in the world combined.
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Je suis Marxiste, tendance Groucho
THat is done. But when food is given to Third world countries it tends to drive local producers out of business meaning these countries are no longer able to produce food and hunger problems get worse.
It depends on what you classify as "food" - for example, the U.S. produces ridiculously large amounts of animal feedstock - is this "food" production or not? Ultimately, it doesn't matter, because that's a red herring. What we're talking about is agricultural productivity and not food production. It would be a fallacy to argue that because the U.S. produces vast quantities of animal feed but imports sugar that capitalism is incapable of feeding its own people. It clearly has enormous production capacity.
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Je suis Marxiste, tendance Groucho
What has this got to do with capitalism's ability to feed its people? Evidently it does eed a lot of people (not everyone of course). All I was pointing out is that the US brings most of its food in from abroad as most western countries do.
As it happens agricultural subsidies are more about keeping agriculture ticking over in case the countries are unable to import food rather than about producing food for the country at the present time.
Most western countries are not particularly comp[etitive when it comes to agriculture because other countries have a comparative advantage over them. That is all I am saying.
Capitalism's fault when it comes to feeding its people comes down to its means of allocating food. Not producing it.
I know that's what you're saying but you're wrong. You are making an error conflating "food production" with "agricultural production." Food production is only a portion of the agricultural products produced in the United States or most first-world countries, because, frankly, our agricultural output is so large it would be impossible to eat it all. So other things are produced, like fuel oil stock, animal feed, and textile fibers, and are produced in very large quantities. The U.S. is actually fairly competitive in agricultural sectors because our higher labor costs are offset by greater efficiency.
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Je suis Marxiste, tendance Groucho
They dont because it would set a negative precedence for their paying customers. Say you have country A, who pay x amount, and you have country B who have no money but are starving. After country A has recieved thier share, there is a surplus, so the company decide to humanely airlift the surplus to B free of charge. The likliehood is that A will create a ruckus about being unfairly treated, so to avoid market problems it is in the best interests of the company to dispose of the goods without them changing hands.
here is a source- (i could probably find more if i had the patience)
http://www.nofear.org/Archives/2005/...astage_so.html
Fair enough it doesnt actually say its literally dumped in the ocean, but the fact remains there is a good 30% unsold surplus accounted for so the disposal means is something of a moot point.
It does matter, if the USA is taking credit for those companies production purely on the basis that they are 'American' which I'm sure is a thing that most cowboy tycoons wear on their sleeves.
Erm, A huge amount of arable land, technological advancement and a realatively low population to land area ratio maybe?
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A large proportion of it though is desert, canyons, mountains and forest so i doubt thats the most significant factor. I put it down to an aggressive economic and foreign policy.
Nobody except apparently you cares about who "takes credit" for American food production. The issue is agricultural productivity, which is demonstrably higher in the United States than most other countries, especially other non-first-world countries. The exception may be American owned and operated farms overseas, which would of course be operated for profit and make efficient use of technology.
You say you got a real solution
Well, you know
We'd all love to see the plan
# # #
Je suis Marxiste, tendance Groucho