China, which only really uses global markets for soybeans, is fretting over soaring shop prices for goods as diverse as pork and seaweed. In India, a fifth of the population is undernourished, according to the United Nations. Both countries have their own issues; for instance, in India, awful infrastructure means a third of produce spoils before it reaches the market. But something is clearly making the problem worse. [emphasis added]For those curious, the "something" referred to in the last sentence is claimed to be an abundance of money.
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.
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Food Waste
A while back I posted on the waste of food in the US, arguing that it was mostly due to our desire for choice. I noted a contrast today in a NYTimes piece on the likelihood of soaring food prices in 2011:
Why Healthcare Is Costly
A nugget from a NYTimes article on the problems of providing adequate Wi-Fi connectivity to conferences, particularly of techies.
"“I’ve been to health care conferences where no one brings a laptop,” said Ross Mayfield, president of the business software company Socialtext and a technology conference regular."That's sad, and also revealing. I doubt there's any conference in USDA where laptops aren't present, at least those conferences where there are worker bees.
Dan Drezner Decides to be Less Genuine
My takeaway from his post on being interviewed on cable news (taking off from Ta Nehisi-Coates post) is:
His fault: "I genuinely want to answer the question asked of me. "
His New Year's resolution: to improve as an interviewee.
His fault: "I genuinely want to answer the question asked of me. "
His New Year's resolution: to improve as an interviewee.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
You Think?
From a post on sex at Barking Up the Wrong Tree:
"Taking the data set as a whole, almost the only way to make the men’s and women’s answers consistent is for there to be some women in the United States who have enormous numbers of sexual partners without reporting that fact in our survey data. It is possible that this is because of the existence of prostitutes. An alternative, and perhaps more likely, explanation is that men overestimate."[emphasis added]
"Taking the data set as a whole, almost the only way to make the men’s and women’s answers consistent is for there to be some women in the United States who have enormous numbers of sexual partners without reporting that fact in our survey data. It is possible that this is because of the existence of prostitutes. An alternative, and perhaps more likely, explanation is that men overestimate."[emphasis added]
Monday, December 27, 2010
Central Cities Safer Than Suburbs?
That's the gist of a Grist post, based on a UVA study. Turns out the risk from things like car accidents and drunk driving outweighs the risk from the crime we think of when "central cities" are mentioned.
Cash Leasing Increasing?
Extension reports an increase in cash leasing as opposed to shares, suggesting an increase in the use of crop insurance to handle risk means farmers are more able to accept the increased risk of cash leasing. There's another possible contributory cause: the declining impact of farm program payments. Relatively speaking, such payments are less important these days; payments have gone down and prices have gone up. When payment limitation is a problem, there's an advantage to share leasing. But with the lesser importance of farm programs, there's also less incentive to worry about payment limitation in managing your affairs.
Friday, December 24, 2010
Merry Christmas from a Procrastinator
Haven't finished a lot of posts I wanted to, but I wish you all a Merry Christmas.
Let All Populists Rejoice
According to this blog post of a study, Harvard Law students are no good (i.e., their free representation of indigents didn't help, and actually delayed decisions).
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
I Use E-Mail, I'm a Geezer
All that fits this Times piece: usage of email by oldtimers is up; by teens is way down.
What Gripes Me: The Golden Rule
As in this case reported in the Times:
"Deutsche Bank agreed to pay $553 million and admit to criminal wrongdoing on Tuesday, settling a long-running investigation into tax shelter fraud that prosecutors say generated billions of dollars in bogus tax benefits."Them as has the gold, rules; or at least break the rules. (I know, Republicans, this is class warfare. The war of class on the masses. Can anyone guess I'm not in a holiday mood today?)
"... Deutsche Bank will avoid prosecution for helping 2,100 customers evade taxes through 2,300 financial transactions. The arrangements, which took place between 1996 and 2002, helped wealthy Americans report more than $29 billion in fraudulent tax losses, according to the Justice Department."
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