Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Saturday, May 15, 2010
Farmers Markets Are Inefficient
That's a reality recognized in this post at Ethicurean. Adam Smith recognized the virtues of specialization, but farmers' markets make the farmer be good at both growing and selling. A farmer who has to spend much of the summer standing in a stall at a market is prevented from growing as much as she can. Granted some select farmers can attract enthusiastic interns who can fill in, but it's not a formula that works for growing that sector of the agricultural economy.
Friday, May 14, 2010
A Symptom of the Times in USDA Succession
Here's a post on the new order of succession at USDA. In old days this was more important, since people worried about nuclear war. These days the order is more symbolic. I don't remember the exact order, but the Under Secretary over FSA and FAS used to be up there. No more--he's now next to last among the under secretaries.
EWG Subsidy Database and the Farm Bill
The Environmental Working Group is knocking USDA for failing to provide farm program payment data tied to individuals when the checks were written to entities. Seems USDA is estimating it would cost a bunch of money ($6.7 million) and Congress changed the law so they don't have to. I'm not a real fan of EWG, I didn't like it back in the last century when they won their court case to get the payment data, but seems to me they're in the right here. Given Obama's emphasis on transparency, it's going to be difficult for the ag committees to hold the line on this one.
Us and the Brits--Transition and Budgets
There's been a little comment in the blogosphere on the transition in Britain. Took a day or two to come up with a coalition government, but now the Brits have all their cabinet in place and beavering away--no long drawn out confirmation hearings and the occasional embarrassing disclosures for the British. That's just a piece with the other ways in which their government differs from ours. I found this in a writeup on the British budget approval process:
The British Parliament has no ways and means committees, no budget committees, no appropriations committees. The committees that do scrutinize government departments lack the power to authorize new government programs and spending. Britain has one dominant figure who controls most of these functions: the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Roughly speaking, the Chancellor of the Exchequer is the Treasury/Finance Minister for the British Government, yet he has unparalleled power compared to the US Treasury Secretary.If I understand, the finances and spending bills get considered and there's the possibility for change, except if the government doesn't agree to the change, they can make it a vote of confidence and win that way.
The Chancellor has sole responsibility for setting tax rates. He does not preside over a tax committee. Rather he makes all of his tax decisions in an annual statement to Parliament, which is referred to as the annual Budget Statement. In essence, the Chancellor is a one-man Ways & Means Committee. The Budget Statement he presents (discussed below in greater detail) outlines not only tax rates, but also the total amount of money that will be spent on all government activities (both mandatory and discretionary).
Thus, the Chancellor is also a one-man Budget Committee.
Thursday, May 13, 2010
Rebound in Prince William County
Post had an article on Wednesday describing a rebound in Prince William county, VA. Schools are full and housing is moving. That fits what I've noted on visits to my mother-in-law in Manassas Park--fewer "for sale" signs up for shorter times.
In my mind this is the way the real estate market revives: the new households formed, whether of immigrants who band together to finance a house, young people finally able to buy instead of rent, low-income households rising up the ladder, all find places where houses are affordable, as in Prince William. They buy new houses and existing houses. The owners of the existing houses then may have the money to finance a more expensive house, and so on up the ladder. Instead of the "trickle-down" theory of wealth, this is the "build from the bottom" theory of housing prices. (And it's one reason why I've still got the bee in my bonnet that the anti-immigrant fervor of 2005-7, as in Tom Tancredo, helped to pop the housing bubble.)
Anyhow, the future is looking a little brighter.
In my mind this is the way the real estate market revives: the new households formed, whether of immigrants who band together to finance a house, young people finally able to buy instead of rent, low-income households rising up the ladder, all find places where houses are affordable, as in Prince William. They buy new houses and existing houses. The owners of the existing houses then may have the money to finance a more expensive house, and so on up the ladder. Instead of the "trickle-down" theory of wealth, this is the "build from the bottom" theory of housing prices. (And it's one reason why I've still got the bee in my bonnet that the anti-immigrant fervor of 2005-7, as in Tom Tancredo, helped to pop the housing bubble.)
Anyhow, the future is looking a little brighter.
USDA Bureaucrat: Lyster Dewey and Hemp
The Post has an article on Lyster Dewey and his diaries, which record his work growing hemp, as well as other things, in the USDA gardens occupying the site where the Pentagon was built. USDA bureaucrats do many things.
Incidentally, during WWII the USDA also had a War Hemp program. Find other links by googling "War Hemp". I remember in the early 70's someone contacted the ASCS records people looking for the old records (I think the program was probably funded out of Commodity Credit Corporation funds.)
Incidentally, during WWII the USDA also had a War Hemp program. Find other links by googling "War Hemp". I remember in the early 70's someone contacted the ASCS records people looking for the old records (I think the program was probably funded out of Commodity Credit Corporation funds.)
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Equal Time for Cows--Predicting Their Behavior
Grew up on a dairy/poultry farm. I've already posted on hens today, so I thought I'd throw in this piece from MIT on a model to predict cows' behavior: specifically whether to stand or lie down.
I'm a little skeptical of Bostonians talking about cows, they're probably more familiar with shoes. But I can't controvert anything said in the post.
I'm a little skeptical of Bostonians talking about cows, they're probably more familiar with shoes. But I can't controvert anything said in the post.
Hens and Cages
From Farm Policy
[Updated--decided to do a little Googling and found this about the French industry.:]
Rod Smith reported yesterday at Feedstuffs Online that, “American consumers buy eggs from cage housing systems by a margin of more than 40 to one over eggs from cage-free systems, according to data from Information Resources Inc. (IRI), which tracks checkout scanner transactions from 34,000 grocery and other retail stores in the U.S.I wonder how it came to be that Americans pay three times less for eggs? Is the European poultry industry less concentrated? Is it not vertically integrated as ours is? Do we just profit by the bigger market? Do Europeans prefer more what in wine they call "terroir", which are the mostly imaginary qualities which are supposedly associated with production in a specific area.
“Furthermore, based on other research, Americans pay three times less for eggs than Europeans do. Also, more than half of Americans prefer that egg producers continue to use current cage housing or migrate to alternative systems such as aviary or colony cages, and 44% prefer cage-free housing.
[Updated--decided to do a little Googling and found this about the French industry.:]
National egg consumption over the last three to four years is estimated at 248 eggs per person on average, compared with 251 a decade ago.
Of these 248 eggs, 172 (69%) are believed to be table eggs, while the remaining 76 (31%) are thought to be processed eggs. Household purchases represent 40% of total consumption, followed by yolk and albumen (31%) for the food industry, table eggs for the catering sector (20%), and poultry farmers’ personal consumption (9%). Supermarket sales amount to nearly 4 billion eggs, or around one third of total consumption. Organic, Label Rouge and free-range eggs account for 28% of eggs sold and 42% of supermarkets’ turnover from egg sales. [I suspect here's a big difference.] France remains one of the EU’s biggest egg consumers.
The French egg market is at a crossroads in a fast-changing regulatory, economic and sanitary environment. While production and consumption perspectives remain favourable at international level, growth is slower in France and the rest of Europe, with a slight decline in production over the last few years.
The sector’s outlook depends on the development of EU-wide regulations concerning animal welfare, human health and the environment. The forthcoming ban on conventional cages, which is due to come into force on 1st January 2012, is expected to result in the further diversification of rearing systems and the development of alternative rearing methods, the ITAVI forecasts. In addition, growing awareness among consumers of animal welfare, as well as health and environmental issues, is likely to shape the market and benefit the organic sector.
The French poultry industry faces the tough challenge of adapting its production structures and making strategic investment choices over the next 20 years. However, the heavy costs involved may result in the disappearance of a number of small poultry farms, says ITAVI deputy manager Jean Champagne. Future production methods will have to guarantee human health and animal welfare as well as offer competitive prices, all the more so as the EU market is likely to be opened to imports from third countries that are not subject to the same requirements.
The March of Progress--Phipps Declares Non-GM Corn Over
John Phipps says genetically modified corn has now swept the field, at least in the U.S., because there's no longer a premium to corn growers for growing non-GMO corn. He's got a pdf essay which he links to from a blog post.
Frailty, Thy Name Is Beginning Gardener
From a NY Times article on the fad for company gardens:
Still, what seems like a good idea in the conference room doesn’t always translate to the field. People don’t always follow through. It’s the same dynamic that fills the office refrigerator with old yogurt containers and moldy lunches.
At PepsiCo, most of the plots are still weedy and empty. The weather has been cool and so, gardeners say, has enthusiasm. Last year when the company first turned over a plot the size of two tennis courts to peppers and tomatoes, 200 of the 1,450 employees here signed up, mailroom workers and midlevel administrators alike. This year, the volunteers dwindled to about 75, and many of them have yet to ready their plots.
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