Farm Subsidies and Food Stamps Won't Fix High Grocery Prices. Innovation Will.
With government meddling, many farmers end up doing less with more, and people end up paying more for less.
Turkey prices are soaring this Thanksgiving, and that's just the tip of the iceberg. With food prices helping to drive inflation to a 40-year high, Americans are feeling the heat at grocery stores and during family dinners. It's in this context that Congress is about to consider yet another farm bill, a massive piece of legislation that allegedly is key to ending hunger in America with farm subsidies and food stamps. Good luck with that. Subsidies and government handouts aren't the way to increase food abundance. This happy outcome instead requires innovation and entrepreneurial creativity.
There's something maddening about the belief that food production would be more abundant and efficient—and the results healthier and less expensive—with even more subsidies for relatively well-off farmers and agribusinesses. Indeed, there is lots of evidence that farm subsidies stifle innovation, make producers less competitive, reduce incentives to boost efficiency and consume less water and fewer pesticides, and shift the focus from farming crops to chasing subsidies. As a result, many farmers end up doing less with more, and people end up paying more for less.
Adding insult to injury, farm subsidies often lead to overproduction, which in theory should reduce the price of farm products and reduce farmers' profits. That is, if the government did not appease this powerful lobby by buying its excess production. In other words, taxpayers pay for subsidies or loan guarantees, and then for the resulting production surplus, and then for storage.
Never mind those distortions, though, because the farm bill's biggest spending is on food stamps. You don't have to be a genius to figure out that these taxpayer dollars would go a lot further toward putting food on poor families' tables if farm subsidies hadn't raised the price of that food in the first place. After years of food subsidies and changes in food stamp eligibility, around 40 million Americans will receive the benefit for a budget of $140 billion this fiscal year.
While putting an increasingly large amount of food-stamp cash in people's pockets can reduce food insecurity for some, the program suffers from serious flaws, including reducing the incentives to work for most of the non-elderly population and reducing income mobility. These flaws are significant obstacles in the fight against child poverty, since employment among low-income parents has driven much of its long-term decline.
It's time for a new approach to fighting food insecurity. Let's do so through true food abundance, not subsidies.
True abundance will be achieved by radical innovation in agricultural technology deployed to effectively and cheaply produce food. It is hard to tell what the details will be; the nature of innovation is such that the future can't be predicted with precision. But if the government gets out of the way, innovators will indeed, as they have in the past, reinvent what we eat and how we create our food to meet growing demand and feed more people.
With vertical and urban farming, imagine growing all of our food in 50-story vertical farms in each major urban area, controlling the growing cycle, reducing transportation costs, and increasing the freshness of the food we eat. Couple that with genetically engineered foods that produce more predictable, more nutritious, faster, and less expensive food than traditional breeding methods, and the possibilities are endless. Lab-grown meat and alternative kinds of milk can please animal welfare and environmentally conscious Americans while also helping people around the world who live in land- and water-poor countries.
Innovation can also improve aquaculture that has been blamed for enormous carbon footprints and the overuse of antibiotics. The international shrimp industry is infamous for its negative impact on the environment and even the use of slave labor. But this problem could be solved through artificial culturing. Soon, there may very well be a lobster in every pot, even for the poorest of us all.
Food innovation will not just change the way we produce food. Nanotechnology could soon reduce food waste and increase its safety in ways that our food-regulation overlords could never deliver on. Innovations in food packaging are expected, including edible packaging made of food-grade polymers such as seaweed and other biodegradable packaging.
While these innovations are not yet ready for prime time, I put my faith in their ability to reduce food insecurity faster and better than can the gazillions of dollars of subsidies the government is angling to provide next year and in years to come.
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It’s only a problem if you plan to serve spittin tobaccy on thanksgiving
the usual gas price is $3.18
And gas was around 5 Biden came into office. Which coincidently, is his preferred age range. Now, where's Jackie?
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Nice bait and switch. Is this the latest talking point from the DNC? Food and grocery prices are high because of poor federal fiscal policy that has led to inflation. You'd think a Libertarian magazine/website would have a good handle on this subject. Seriously, WTF.
The politicians don't have to pretend to care what you think anymore, so the printer is going to brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
And as long as the money printer goes brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr, we will have higher grocery prices. When the money supply is too high, it buys less stuff as the money isn't worth as much. Money is just as much a commodity as anything else.
Nothing that a few more thousand dollar checks can't fix.
Gimme. More.
Yeah, the specific ambiguity is strong.
At first I was gobsmacked Reason would even print the sentence "Never mind those distortions, though, because the farm bill's biggest spending is on food stamps." but then they go on and directly refute that statement with the rest of the paragraph. Almost like it was said in satire or they didn't understand what they were saying.
So, either they're confused that ~80% of the farm bill spending directly at the register is, somehow, distorting prices less than the other 20% spread through the production process or they know the 80% has at least a proportionally-sized influence and are obfuscating in defense of their pet-cause 80%.
Journalism is hard.
Especially when you're beholden to the narrative.
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Inflation is caused by monetary explanation, but the farm bill is still a complete load of shit.
You'd think
There are a number of large farmers who may be making more from their YouTube channels, for example Millennial Farmer, than they are from their farms. Their farms have become content drivers for their channels.
High prices in the supermarkets? That's nothing that environmental mandates, fossil fuel bans, commodity shortages, and prohibitions on plastic bags can't fix.
Each cornucopian 'advance' listed in the 8th paragraph has a set of negative impacts that are equal to or greater than those belonging to the method, product, or technology with which it competes. Non-dairy milk in particular has had an ugly impact on the areas where it is produced. See also, quinoa, or any of the other foods that the urban douche crowd love so much. Vertical and urban farming are both energy and water intensive, despite claims that they are more efficient. Are they possible solutions? Yes, but so is traditional agriculture that is supported instead of maligned. As for laboratory grown meats, given the ongoing freak-out about GMOs, it seems unlikely that they will be accepted on a wide scale.
Speaking of that paragraph, I couldn't help but think of all the subsidies and "incentives" that could be handed out for them.
Well look at you Mr. "I read the articles all the way to the end"!
I LOL'ed at 'Nanotechnology' though.
"With government meddling, many farmers end up doing less with more, and people end up paying more for less."
Thanks, droolin' Joe!
I'll plug "Smarter Every Day" on YouTube. Guy gives farmers some respect from an engineering point of view.
Trying to think of something/anything that’s not subsidized in the U.S. Cable? I’d assume in the 20percent of subsidized condos -newer buildings, the cable or Wi-Fi is subsidized by the 80percent free market buyers.
People like free shit. I’m shocked
Now do diesel, fossil fuels, fertilizer and Sri Lanka
"fixing" high grocery prices is not the goal of farm subsidies and food stamps. Not even in the same ballpark.
This whole mess misses a lot.
The distribution system, especially when it comes to animal processing, is a textbook regulatory capture scheme. You have to have expensive inspectors on site, all the time, and other regulatory burdens that make it impossible to prop up new meat processing plants. You have to be monstrously large to amortize the costs, so the very few massive processors own almost all of the industry.
This bottleneck a couple of years ago meant that hog farmers were culling their hogs because they couldn't get them slaughtered for sale, and yet no new processing popped up to fill the obvious massive void in the market. Consumers paid more for pork even when pork belly prices were at an all time low.
Likewise ethanol mandates massively incentivize converting otherwise productive croplands over to corn fields not meant to grow food, but to put something in our gas tanks that doesn't actually help... anything.
Innovation won't do shit. It's not farm subsidies or food stamps, it's literally a regulatory stranglehold that makes it impossible to bring new competition to the market.
The democrats raised food stamp benefits by 25percent, not 3percent or adjusted for food inflation, but a 25percent bump up.
https://www.npr.org/2021/08/16/1028080631/food-stamps-snap-program-largest-single-increase-in-history
Food stamp printer go brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.
It’s not just animals. A bag of potato chips is 5 times what it was a year ago. Snack food, dry beans, cereal. It’s free food and completely open borders
I just shopped for my Pack camp out, and used a spreadsheet template that we have for planning meals. Last year's campout cost $2.80 per person for breakfast. The same breakfast this year was 4.50.
People, especially rural people, can break loose from industrialized meat. Hunting, fishing, raising animals, (poultry is a good start) and bartering are all relatively easy when done locally.
I have two meat freezers and not a bar code on a single package.
"shift the focus from farming crops to chasing subsidies"
^BINGO............
A story as old as the hills.
CRIMINALS are a NET-NEGATIVE who conquer and consume until there's nothing left. Government is NOTHING but a monopoly of GUN-Force. Using GUNS to STEAL ?free? stuff doesn't CREATE it.
That is the repeating curse of humanity and the root of all their struggles. The falling of every nation under the sun. You can't maintain wealth and prosperity with CRIMINAL intentions. There has to be Liberty and JUSTICE.. Counterfeiting money is CRIMINAL. STEALING money not EARNED is CRIMINAL.
One's CRIMINAL actions breeds others. It a root of self-destruction that grows exponentially. Making a living from GUNS has to STOP!
Has Veronique put too much pot on her lobster ?
vertical and urban farming... controlling the growing cycle, reducing transportation costs, and increasing the freshness of the food we eat… genetically engineered foods that produce more predictable, more nutritious, faster, and less expensive,,, can please animal welfare and help... people around the world who live in land- and water-poor countries.
Fresh caught fish is an almost unknown luxury in Florida, up to and including Trump resorts. Order pompano in Pompano Beach and you'll be lucky to get a frozen pomfret raised in the Chinese fish gulag.
Sooo, your first example- turkey- is not directly subsidized nor is any other meat. Well, what about the grain they eat? Grain farmers have not received a subsidy (for low grain prices which triggers them) since 2017. The only other thing that is subsidized is crop insurance- if farmers buy it and typically it is a break even proposition or worse so its value is questionable. The other is conservation- which typically takes acres out of production. This MAY theoretically raise prices but conservation acres have only risen incrementally as of late and are still about 10 million acres below what they were historically. The real bump in grain price is from input costs and low supplies due to COVID and the Ukraine War but still food production/farming is less than 10 cents of your food dollar. Lastly, vertical farming grain is not even remotely an option. All developed countries we trade with and compete against provide subsidies to their farmers (pssst...to keep them in business and safeguard their food supplies).
Lastly, vertical farming grain is not even remotely an option.
Vertical farming anything is not an option. It's modern, urban, Gaia-doom-based huskterism parading as science like Theranos or Cambrian Genomics. At it's core, it's a fundamental refutation of geometry and physics and you can get away with it in fractional proportion of otherwise abundance, but large or wholesale shifting is just dumb. Even if you were stuck on Mars or in a metal tube in space, surface area would still be king and a Dyson sphere would still be peak efficiency/maximum capture.
"... a Dyson sphere would still be peak efficiency/maximum capture."
Second place? "Ringworld."
A significant innovation in crop harvests concerns not having to replant from season to season. Not every crop (corn, for example) will produce more than once and then must be replanted from scratch. But most vegetables keep on producing.
Nevertheless, farmers often waste lots of fuel & grind replanting crops the next year because perennials die as annuals in colder climates.
Engineering a corn cultivar that can continue indefinite fruiting production should be an awesome gain, and shrinking its height in favor of more foliage could be better for urban farm harvests.
Nevertheless, farmers often waste lots of fuel & grind replanting crops the next year because perennials die as annuals in colder climates.
Engineering a corn cultivar that can continue indefinite fruiting production should be an awesome gain, and shrinking its height in favor of more foliage could be better for urban farm harvests.
You do realize that a big part of the reason why corn dies is because it doesn’t get enough sun to produce and freezes solid, right? That, even if you engineered it to survive the freeze, it would still get less energy from less sunlight and consume more energy either producing it’s own anti-freeze, or repairing the damage it suffered from freezing, (or both) right? That shrinking it’s height produce more foliage would produce less of the part of the plant we actually eat *and* make it more susceptible to freezing (which is why deciduous plants shed their leave in winter and regrow them in summer), right?
JFC, you people sound like the idiot CEO of Cambrian Genomics who deleted himself talking about apple trees the size of oak trees, ignorant of the fact that solid oak wood doesn’t pump enough water to produce apples and, even if it did, the upper tonnage of apples in a 100 ft. tall tree would tear an oak trunk apart in a strong breeze, let alone hard rains, snows, or a combination of the three. And that’s to say nothing of the fact that the higher limbs would overshadow the lower ones putting the more productive fruit *further* out of reach.
Edit: None of which is to say that improvements can't be made, but the idea that we just CRISPR a few genes in and double yields defies physics and the biology that flows from it.
"With vertical and urban farming, imagine growing all of our food in 50-story vertical farms in each major urban area"
Why, though? The United States has ample farmland. Building a tremendously expensive structure on tremendously expensive land can't possibly be competitive with just growing crops on the ground. The appeal of vertical urban farming is that it's cool, not that it makes any kind of economic sense.
makes any kind of economic sense
It doesn't make any kind of sense *except* to force people to eat plants, lock people in place geographically, make food literally and figuratively harder to access, and guarantee people starve with even minor disturbances, let alone catastrophes. It's pretending that matter is more efficiently moved up and down 1000 (or whatever) feet in Earth's gravity well, than it is moved laterally 1000 (or whatever) feet. I can run through back-of-the-napkin math if you like, but to feed 10,000 people you'd need roughly 2,000 acres, approximately 8 Willis Towers. To avoid overshadowing each other, they would need to be spaced out *over the same 2,000 acres* (and that's with a lot of 'square cow'/'rectangular prism skyscraper' math). That's 8 Willis Towers for a town 0.03% the size of Chicago, which only has 1 (and struggles to keep that open, occupied, and otherwise not fucked up).
I’d wager that no amount of innovation will get us out of this, if we’re still entangled in the global suicide pact/backwards March towards feudalism we have made with the EU and the commonwealth.
Some of the most innovative and productive farms on the planet are being forced to massively cut production in the middle of a crises. Just like nuclear plants and North Sea off shore drilling.
As long as the Iowa caucuses are important you are unlikely to see changes in the farm bill. I would also suggest that as agriculture is rural and Republicans dominant in rural areas, you are unlikely to see reductions.
Funny how it's always leftard urbanites trying to put rural Republicans on the Gov-GUN THEFT payroll while rural Republicans constantly try to stop it.
Leftard PROJECTION 101 -- Blame others for exactly what they do.
Government innovation, that is! Another serving of pork for everybody!
I completely agree that farm subsidies are bad, but isn’t a subsidy causing price increases totally counter to basic economic theory? What would normally result is a surplus of subsidized crops and a reduction in price. If the government buys up the surplus then the price would remain the same, unless they buy up even more than the surplus.
What really happens is that we are flush with subsidized crops like grains and sugars as well as the meat products whose livestock is fed with the subsidized grains. Fruits and vegetables get only .4% of the subsidies, so they are underproduced. And you start to get the picture of why we have an obesity problem. The market distortion caused by the government.
Sorry, most innovation tinkering on the margins, 🙁
Consider the healthcare behemoth where it is non-stop innovation all the time...EXCEPT when it comes to the government's proper role.
https://mises.org/library/one-hundred-years-medical-fascism
TL; DR - that's a feature not a bug