Should you be more negative to your children than anyone else? Should you treat your employees better than your children? That's what's implied in this table from a post at Barking Up the Wrong Tree reporting research from this book. The question is: if you want the best relationship, what's the ideal ratio of positive interactions to negative. For example, parents should praise their children 3 times for each time they reprove them, etc. If the research is right, I was a lousy boss.
Of course the point is to be mostly positive to everyone.
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.
Monday, May 14, 2012
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Pot, Locavores, and the Farm Bill
Since the beginning, the farm bill has sought to protect farmers from price risk and weather risk, the risk of low prices through overproduction and the risk of low production from.bad weather. The methods provided in the laws have varied, including cartels, supply management, crop insurance and disaster payments, all of which are conditioned on the basic fact that in a free market, farmers are price takers, mostly at the mercy of those who buy from them.
Because marijuana is illegal, you don't see a lot of discussion about its economics, so I've only vague impressions to go on. (See this PBS piece which looks at costs and volume.)Because pot is illegal, its dealers are insulated from market pressures: once they've established themselves in an area, they tend to have a relatively stable monopoly. So the tendency is for basically stable networks of growers-dealers-buyers, meaning prices are pretty stable. (Can I find a parallel with contract growers of poultry, pork, etc., which also have stable networks?) And because pot is illegal, there's a high entry cost for growers. That's what "illegal" means. But it also means that "weather risk" can extend to "law risk"--the chances of a bust.
My impression is that the importation of marijuana is down, and domestic growing is up. In that sense, the pot industry has been moving in the direction of locavore. As "grow houses" have proliferated, it's become more localized and more production oriented, more industrial, less organic.
Comes now the legalization of "medical marijuana" (I use quotes because I think it's really a backdoor way to semi-legalize marijuana) which seems to have disrupted the pot economy, according to an article in today's NYTimes Post, for which I can't find the url. (I'll try to add it later.)
On the one hand you have competition among the vendors, both on quality and price. On the other you have growers having problems. Bottom line is the bottom has dropped out of the price, with big repercussions on the economy of such counties as Humboldt, CA.
One wonders when pot will make it into the farm bill?
Because marijuana is illegal, you don't see a lot of discussion about its economics, so I've only vague impressions to go on. (See this PBS piece which looks at costs and volume.)Because pot is illegal, its dealers are insulated from market pressures: once they've established themselves in an area, they tend to have a relatively stable monopoly. So the tendency is for basically stable networks of growers-dealers-buyers, meaning prices are pretty stable. (Can I find a parallel with contract growers of poultry, pork, etc., which also have stable networks?) And because pot is illegal, there's a high entry cost for growers. That's what "illegal" means. But it also means that "weather risk" can extend to "law risk"--the chances of a bust.
My impression is that the importation of marijuana is down, and domestic growing is up. In that sense, the pot industry has been moving in the direction of locavore. As "grow houses" have proliferated, it's become more localized and more production oriented, more industrial, less organic.
Comes now the legalization of "medical marijuana" (I use quotes because I think it's really a backdoor way to semi-legalize marijuana) which seems to have disrupted the pot economy, according to an article in today's NYTimes
On the one hand you have competition among the vendors, both on quality and price. On the other you have growers having problems. Bottom line is the bottom has dropped out of the price, with big repercussions on the economy of such counties as Humboldt, CA.
One wonders when pot will make it into the farm bill?
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Online Service at Social Security
Social Security Administration has added the ability to establish an account and access your personal data online. Seems to be a good site, permitting very strong passwords (upper/lower case, multiple symbols--I used LastPass capabilities), and some questions which really are personal and can't be determined from online data, at least not until the Facebook generation reaches SS eligibility.) Even offers the tie-in with one's cellphone, which is becoming popular these days. One problem, though: apparently it's only available through business hours, not 24/7. ??
Tradeoffs in India
"Open wifi networks are banned in India, because they make life difficult
for policemen. This is a bad tradeoff : we have sacrificed the immense
gains from ubiquitous open wifi networks, in return for reducing the
work of policemen."
from Ajay Shah's blog.
from Ajay Shah's blog.
Friday, May 11, 2012
Pigford Deadline Today
The final date for submitting papers for Pigford II is today, applicable only to those who filed late for Pigford I.
Corn Prices and the New Farm Bill
Just a note based on items in Farm Policy--apparently the warm spring has meant early corn planting on large acreages which means prospects for the crop are good, which means prospects for prices are poor (maybe as low as $4--which would have seemed great when I worked). And the evaluation of the Senate Ag farm bill is that if there are multiple years with lower prices the program payments will decline, an idea the evaluators don't like, preferring instead the guarantee provided by target prices set in the law.
Thursday, May 10, 2012
"Progressives" and "The Progressive Farmer"
Minds are funny. I just Google+1ed a post at Casaubon's Book, something I rarely do. (The writer Sharon Astyk is deep into the foodie movement: peak oil, locavore, sustainable, etc. but very articulate.) The post was about gay marriage, and noted the legal and property considerations involved in marriage--recommend it. She would qualify as a political "progressive" in most people's books.
Anyway, the next post on my RSS feed was Chris Clayton's column at "The Progressive Farmer". The conjunction of someone who's really progressive and the magazine, which isn't progressive at all, at least in the sense that some of the conservatives I follow would use it (i.e., as an epithet, a tad better than "socialist" but much worse than "liberal") struck me.
"Progessive" as used in connection with farming used to mean the wide-awake, up-to-date farmer, someone who was on his way to being an "industrial" farmer, as the foodies would have it. It's rather ironic to me to see the evolution of the term.
Anyway, the next post on my RSS feed was Chris Clayton's column at "The Progressive Farmer". The conjunction of someone who's really progressive and the magazine, which isn't progressive at all, at least in the sense that some of the conservatives I follow would use it (i.e., as an epithet, a tad better than "socialist" but much worse than "liberal") struck me.
"Progessive" as used in connection with farming used to mean the wide-awake, up-to-date farmer, someone who was on his way to being an "industrial" farmer, as the foodies would have it. It's rather ironic to me to see the evolution of the term.
Soybeans: It Wasn't Franklin After All
Earlier I linked to a blog post at Boston 1775 describing how Ben Franklin, the great bureaucrat, was the first with soybeans in the colonies, specifically tofu.
Turns out that was wrong. The soybean types have got to Boston 1775 and he has corrected the account. It was really Samuel Bowen of Georgia, who was first actually to grow soybeans here and describe their uses. But Bowen didn't get to tofu, so Franklin can still be the patron of the foodies.
Aside: it surprises me to find the China trade existing back in 1758, but apparently it was well established. Although my rapidly fading memory of the book 1493 says countries other than England were trading with the Chinese maybe by the end of the 16th century.
Turns out that was wrong. The soybean types have got to Boston 1775 and he has corrected the account. It was really Samuel Bowen of Georgia, who was first actually to grow soybeans here and describe their uses. But Bowen didn't get to tofu, so Franklin can still be the patron of the foodies.
Aside: it surprises me to find the China trade existing back in 1758, but apparently it was well established. Although my rapidly fading memory of the book 1493 says countries other than England were trading with the Chinese maybe by the end of the 16th century.
Not Another Cheerleader
Sorry, but my political prejudices are showing. This sentence from a Post profile of the young Romney jumped out: "He was not a natural athlete, but found his place among the jocks by
managing the hockey team and leading megaphone cheers for the football
team."
Wednesday, May 09, 2012
Clay Christenson--Mormon and Incredible Person
One of my favorite books (listed way down the blog and not updated for years) is Clay Christensen's Innovator's Dilemma.. Now the New Yorker this week has a very nice profile of the guy, a professor at Harvard Business. Unfortunately only the abstract and beginning paragraphs are available online, but I recommend reading it somewhere somehow. He sounds too good to be true, but judge for yourself.
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