Sunday, October 28, 2007

Talking about...Farm bill, Canadian cattle, Food safety

Who said what about the new farm bill
“We would not oppose the latest version.”
Mark Dopp, American Meat Institute Senior VP for Regulatory Affairs and General Council.
>PS: He’s Ok with it.

"We have serious concerns about this language. It appears to create a two-tier system within FSIS."
Philip Kimball, North American Meat Processors Association Executive Director.
>PS: He’s afraid the provision allowing state-inspected facilities to compete in inter-state commerce could give eligible processors an economic advantage over NAMP members.

"It doesn't make sense to take these smart business options away from cattle producers, simply because of unfounded and unsubstantiated fears that packers are gaining too much control over cattle production."
Joe Schuele, NCBA Communications Director.
>PS: He’s OK with expanded ownership of cattle.

"We don't like it. Not only does it ban packer ownership of hogs, but our legal counsel are adamant that the language also bans marketing contracts between producers and packers."
David Warner, National Pork Producers Council Communications Director.
>PS: He’s OK with expanded ownership of hogs.
(Source: Meatingplace, October, 26, 2007)________________________________________________________

"I told him he stole my cattle, but he said he had no bidding competition so what was he to do. I knew prices were low but I didn't expect that bombshell. I'm pretty depressed. I've put my life into this."
(Source: CountryGuide, October 27, 2007)
Marcel Turgeon, Alberta cattleman, talking about the short bid for 123 of his best Charolais when he watched 50 years of his life get sold for $56,000.
>PS: Under normal market conditions Turgeon could have gotten $200,000 to $250,000 for the pregnant cows. He only got $479 apiece.

“We’re beginning to feel that the 2002 guidelines have not been enacted to the maximum.”
(Source: New York Times. October 23, 2007)
Dr. Richard A. Raymond, USDA under secretary for food safety, responding to a question during an interview about the reasons behind the upsurge in E. coli cases this summer.
>PS: What he was really saying was did the Agriculture Department give the meat industry too much leeway to police itself?

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Talking about: Farm bill, Food safety, Grassfed beef, USDA, FDA

“Politicians are fond of sticking out their chests and declaring that America’s farm policies will be written in Washington, not Geneva. That’s a good applause line, but at the same time Congress has rightly determined that it makes sense to participate in a global organization that establishes trade rules. American farmers depend upon the export market. For every two acres of wheat we grow, one is shipped abroad. The last thing we need is for our customers to quit buying because their governments are imposing tariffs with the approval of the World Trade Organization.”
(Source: New York Times, October 15, 2007)
Dean Kleckner, farmer, chairman of Truth About Trade and Technology, president of the American Farm Bureau from 1986 to 2000, in an editorial asking for a closer match between America’s farm policies and international trading standards.
>PS: Policy making ONLY in Washington? When such one-sided thinking is done in other countries, we condemn it as ultra-nationalism.

"The USDA rules for grassfed claims don't serve consumers or farmers well. Consumers of grassfed products want animals raised on pasture without growth hormones or antibiotics. Farmers need a standard that will preserve consumer trust in grassfed claims and protect the value of this important niche market. By focusing exclusively on feed, the USDA standard leaves the door open for an industrial model of agriculture that absolutely goes against public expectations for grassfed products. The USDA standard simply doesn't go far enough to make a meaningful and marketable grassfed label. This will confuse consumers and it will hurt the farmers and ranchers who pioneered grassfed."
(Source: American Grassfed Association press release, October 17, 2007)
Carrie Balkcom, AGA director, rejecting the new USDA grassfed label.
>PS: Follow the money. Widening the definition lets the more powerful players in the game and they don’t want to play by the original rules.

“It was the worst experience of my life. Every day I was just basically praying, hoping that she would get through this. Our food is supposed to be safe. Well, it’s definitely not safe enough.” Cynthia Cintura, a mother talking about the effects of E. coli on her 4 year old daughter, Lauren.
“…anyone using ground beef needs to assume that meat is contaminated and handle it accordingly. That means cooking it thoroughly and preventing cross-contamination. You, dear consumer, are the last line of defense.”
(Source: MSNBC, October 17, 2007)
Herb Weisbaum, MSNBC’s ‘Consumerman,’ talking about the recent recalls and suggesting a course of action that would have prevented Lauren’s illness.
>PS: Herb speaks a painful truth. Here’s something our grandparents knew and to many of us have forgotten - all foods are hazardous when they’re not handled and prepared correctly…beef, pork, poultry, spinach, broccoli, potato salad, etc.

"The USDA has become a toothless tiger when it comes to keeping our meat clean and safe. Ensuring the safety of our meat and poultry requires immediate action."
(Source: New Jersey Star-Ledger, October 15, 2007)
Charles Schumer, U.S. Senator, (D-N.Y.) Responding to nationwide recalls by two frozen hamburger companies by claiming he would push for legislation to improve federal oversight of meat safety.
>PS: Only when political pressure reaches critical mass does anything get done in Washington.

"There is agreement that the current system of FDA inspections at the border doesn't work, and there is agreement that FDA needs additional resources and there is a conceptual agreement that this prevention model is the way to go."
(Source: Baltimore Sun, October 18, 2007)
William Hubbard, spokesman for a coalition of groups trying to boost the agency's budget.
>PS: A major increase in food that needs to be inspected, no increase in budget? Time to spend some cash on something other than the usual Washington pork barrel politics.

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Talking about...Saddles and cattle, Beef history, Farm subsidies, State inspection, Ethanol bubbles

“They are pretty even. Saddles are easier to get rid of than cattle.''
(Source: KOTV.com, September 25, 2007)
John Bradshaw, special ranger for the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association, comparing the theft of saddles and cattle.
>PS: He had just tracked down 24 stolen saddles valued at $19,000.

“The great meat companies of the world were here: Swift, Armour, Oscar Mayer, they were all here…Meat was all dry-aged, everything on the bone. Everything was primal cuts…Raw meat now is cleaner than cooked meat in the 1970s…Early 20th century cattle were substantially different, too: smaller and chunkier ‘belt-buckle cattle’."
(Source: Chicago Sun-Times, September 26, 2007)
Robert Hatoff, chairman and CEO of Allen Brothers, reminiscing about the history of the beef industry during the 27th National Beef Cook-off at the Renaissance Chicago hotel.

"Federal farm subsidies are already narrowly focused on certain crops and are excessive. They become ridiculous given the exploding possibilities to grow crops for biofuels production."
(Source: Washington Post, September 28, 2007)
Sen. Richard G. Lugar (R-IN), farmer, former chairman of the Senate agriculture committee, talking about the payments still being made to corn farmers suddenly awash in ethanol cash.
>PS: The honorable Richard Lugar is right. My tax money ought to not to be used to ‘prop up’ profitable businesses.

“If we want to open more markets up to American agriculture products abroad, we ought to start opening them at home first,”
(Source: St. Louis Today. September 30, 2007)
Rep. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., House Minority Leader and a chief sponsor of the new state inspection rules, suggesting state inspection ought to be on a par with federal inspection.
>PS: Equivalent rules; equivalent business opportunities. Sounds fair to me.

“The end of the ethanol boom is possibly in sight and may already be here. This is a dangerous time for people who are making investments.”
(Source: New York Times, September 30, 2007)
Neil E. Harl, an economics professor emeritus at Iowa State University, lecturer on ethanol and consultant to producers, warning that the bubble is about to burst.
>PS: Everytime the feds decide to artificially ‘prop up’ a business, boom and bust is sure to follow.

Sunday, September 09, 2007

Taking about...Illegal immigration, Korea, Switchgrass, Farm aid

“It’s not a cake walk down here. At least I know the one thing I don’t have to worry about is losing my labor force because of an immigration raid.”
(Source: New York Times, September 5, 2007)
Steve Scaroni, California produce farmer, talking about why he’s slowly moving his $50 million ag business to Mexico.
>PS: Can’t get cheap, legal field hands in the U.S.? Move the fields to where the cheap, legal ‘hands’ are. Can we say ‘outsourcing?’

“We do not understand why the government is so anxious to allow the U.S. beef import. It is time when a more cautious approach is needed.’’
(Source: Korea Times, September 4, 2007)
Nam Ho-gyeong, head of the Hanwoo Association for the promotion of sales of Korean beef cattle, wondering aloud why top level government officials are still in talks with the USDA about opening up their market to American beef. . . especially after receiving YET ANOTHER shipment containing bones this week.
>PS: He’s using the same language against the U.S. as Dr. Max Thornsberry is using against Canada. Max, meet Nam. Nam, this is Dr. Thornsberry, president of R-CALF. You have a lot in common.
>PPS: Another U.S. packer did it again? Another self-inflicted, ‘Swift’ shot to the foot for American beef!

Point
"Consumers care about where their food is coming from and how it's produced. It (COOL) creates at least a sense that companies are tracking where the food is coming from. You can't get that now." Joseph Mendelson, legal director of the Center for Food Safety.
Counterpoint
"The requirement is simply too restrictive and demanding, especially given today's globalized economy. Meat producers have enough adequate safety checks in place for consumers without this regulation." Jeremy Russell, spokesman for the National Meat Association.
(Source: Detroit News, September 3, 2007)

“We can get to a beer, about a 5 percent alcohol solution. We'd like to be able to get to a wine. We'd like to be able to get to about a 15 percent solution."
(Source: Washington Post, September 6, 2007)
George Douglas, a spokesman for the National Renewable Energy Laboratory talking about the advances that need to be made before switchgrass is a viable alternative to corn.
>PS: Are we still arguing food vs fuel? Will switchgrass be the answer? Stay tuned.

“Farmers are never going to survive if they don’t have as allies the people who want this good food. New York has a huge density of eaters and a density of people who are doing excellent things. There are restaurants, farmers’ markets, community-supported agriculture programs, even people who are growing food in the city and teaching people how to grow it.”
(Source: New York Times, September 7, 2007)
Carolyn Mugar, executive Director of Farm Aid, explaining why the event will take place in New York City this year.
>PS: Farm Aid fights valiantly against ‘industrial farming.’ Their ancestors were called Luddites.

“I can't imagine that these errors continue to be made. Food safety is not at issue. It's a compliance issue. It doesn't help our reputation when we can't get it right. It undermines our credibility."
(Source: Forbes.com, September 5, 2007)
Ben Nelson, U.S. Senator, Nebraska calling for more oversight of federal beef inspectors and beef exports after yet another blunder was revealed this week.

“The American consumer is equally responsible for the influx of migrant workers to the United States. All of us have benefited greatly from the migration of Latino labor these last 20 years. Our homes have been built by undocumented hands, our roads have been widened by illegal workers, our universities are being built by undocumented construction workers. And practically all of our food is harvested, processed and served by Latino immigrant workers. We are all responsible for this migration one way or another.”
(Source: Appalachian States University News, September 6, 2007)
Paul Cuadros, award-winning author, speaking about the growing number of Latino workers immigrating to North Carolina and the nation at Appalachian State University’s fall convocation.
>PS: He said the silent (and occasionally not so silent) migration of Latino workers began in the late 20th century and was orchestrated by U.S. corporations and the government actively seeking cheap labor.

Point
"Unlawful employment is one of the key magnets drawing illegal aliens across our borders. When illegal aliens use fraudulent documents or engage in identity theft, they not only exploit a vulnerability, they also cause real harm to U.S. citizens. We will pursue egregious violators by seeking criminal charges and continue to deploy tools such as the new social security no-match guidelines to help businesses comply with the law." Julie L. Myers, assistant secretary of Homeland Security for ICE. "
Counterpoint
“The immigration raid on Koch Foods was the result of Congress’ failure to enact comprehensive reform. We understand that immigration officials need to do their jobs and enforce the laws, but we are saddened that they do it in a way that pulls families apart and sends immigrants further into the shadows. More than anything, we need our lawmakers to get back to the table and, in a civil manner, reform our broken immigration system." Tony Stieritz, director of the Cincinnati archdiocese’s office of Social Action.
(Source: The Catholic Telegraph, September 7, 2007)

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Talking about…Cow chipping, Ethanol, Ractopamine, Poultry & Terrorists, Big Mac

"My son is going to do the little tractor pull over there, but my girls are too shy. But we definitely have to take part in the cow-chip throwing contest. Then we can go back and say 'This is what people in Kansas do.'"
(Source: Emporia Gazette [KS], August 19, 2007)
Stephanie Harvey of Addy, Washington, talking about all the fun she and her family were having at Emporia’s Annual Beef Fest.
PS: Stephanie, you’re a home-town girl! I hope you’ll tell folks in Washington that Kansans do more than toss around a few cow chips.

"One of the reasons is ethanol. Of course, those who produce ethanol will tell you it's not, but these new uses of corn mean there will be more demand for corn."
(Source: Houston Chronicle/Food Business News, August 20, 2007)
Eugenio Aleman, senior economist at Wells Fargo, talking about the reasons behind a ‘significant’ increase of between $8 and $20 per week in the price two thirds of all Americans report they’re paying for groceries.
>PS: Joe Outlaw, co-director of the Agricultural and Food Policy Center at Texas A&M, said about 14% of the U.S. corn crop is used to produce ethanol as an environmentally-friendly alternative and gasoline supplement.

"Because the drug has not been approved for use in China, the country has a zero tolerance. It can be given to the animals right up to slaughter which means trace elements of the drug can remain after slaughter."
(Source: The [Springdale] Morning News, August 20, 2007)
Lynn Heinze, spokesman the U.S. Meat Export Federation, explaining the ractopamine problem that closed the Chinese market to products from 11 U.S. pork plants.
>PS: Heinze said the drug is approved in more than 20 countries and believed to be manufactured illegally in China.
>PPS: They can send our children toys covered with lead-based paint but we can’t send them pork with trace amounts of ractopamine, a feed ingredient that ‘redirects energy and nutrients away from fat deposition and toward lean (muscle) tissue deposition?’ OK, let’s ship them some good, old-fashioned fat back.

"What terrorist would focus on propane tanks on a chicken farm? It's ridiculous. Poultry farms are not near population centers. An exploding propane tank would do little harm to the chicken houses, much less any other buildings on the farm, much less anybody else."
(Source: BusinessWeek, August 21, 2007)
Bill Satterfield, Executive Director, Delmarva Poultry Industry, wondering about the intellect behind a Department of Homeland Security proposal that would require most poultry farms to register their propane tanks.
>PS: Maybe DHS has uncovered a terrorist plot to attack our chicken flocks?

"You can live in Beijing or Brooklyn and you can enjoy as your favorite snack a Big Mac attack. Maybe you didn't grow up watching the same cartoons, maybe you didn't grow up speaking the same language, maybe you grew up next door to each other and never said hello, but you suddenly have a point of reference — this warm, yummy, bad-for-you, sometimes-naughty thing."
(Source: MSNBC / Associated Press, August 24, 2007)
Rachel Weingarten, pop culture expert, talking about a 40 year old international cultural ‘artifact.’
>PS: A ‘naughty’ sandwich? Is a trip to McD’s a journey to sin and degradation?

"We have no doubt we will have to continue to explain why a cattleman should continue to be able to sell cattle to whoever he wants," said
(Source: CBS News / Associated Press, August 25, 2007)
Jay Truitt, a lobbyist for NCBA., talking about maintaining the status quo on trading rules.
>PS: Smaller ranchers (make that R-CALF) want to do something about the increasing consolidation of the beef packing industry which they claim kills their chances at making a fair profit.

Farming for votes: Campaign 2008Campaigning in Greenfield, Iowa, Rudolph Giuliani was asked “Have you spent any time on a farm?”

“Have I ever worked on a farm? No. I mean, I’ve visited a farm. But you know there are no farms in New York City.”

“People in Staten Island feel like they are part of their own community,” he said. “You get the same feeling you get in smaller-town America.”
(According to Wikipedia, in 2006 Staten Island had 477,000 people. It’s bigger than Cleveland or Kansas City and about the size of Atlanta, making it the 33rd largest city in America.)

To help small farmers, Barack Obama said the federal government should invest in cellulosic ethanol and encourage farmers to produce more corn. Speaking in New Hampshire, he said. "I do think it's crucial to encourage the ethanol industry as a way of building up infrastructure.”.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Talking about. . .Immigration reform, Korea, Blue-eared pigs, FDA labs

“In fact I think it would be prudent if we offered our own State of the State of the Border speech to keep them honest. It’s not that we don’t trust them, it’s just that — well, we don’t trust them.”
(Source: The Hill, August 10, 2007)
Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO.), a critic of the White House immigration policy, commenting on the new but failed immigration reform initiatives.
>PS: It’s a polarizing issue gone critical, so expect any survival-first politician to practice his or her “duck and cover” techniques.

"It's been a German town for a long time, every morning at 5 o'clock, 5 or 6 o'clock, it's like a cuckoo clock, German ladies out sweeping their sidewalks. And now they're (immigrants) not mowing their lawn, and so they're trying to pass laws to get people to keep up their lawns and not park their car on them."
(Source: Houston Chronicle, August 18, 207)
Perry Roberts, long time resident of Ft. Morgan, CO, complaining about the influx of low paid, low skilled Latino immigrants. Most work in the nearby Cargill meat packing plant.
>PS: Senor Roberts, habla Espanol?

“The U.S. demand, based on the World Organization for Animal Health’s (OIE) assessment that the country has its mad cow threat under control, is that Korea import its beef regardless of the age of its beef cows and whether or not the beef contains bone fragments and specified risk materials that could cause bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease. It is a demonstration of America’s arrogant approach to beef negotiations when, in response to the discovery of a vertebral column, it says there is no safety problem, except for the fact the cow was younger than 30 months old.”
(Source: The Hankyoreh (Korea), August 13, 2007)
Unsigned editorial taking the U.S. to the woodshed over the recent beef fracas

“Further excessive demand is feared to trigger anti-American sentiment and even a campaign to boycott U.S. beef. Koreans are accustomed to collective motives rather than individual ones. And such trends become more apparent when related to international issues involving surrounding nations such as the U.S., in particular.”
(Source: Korea Times, August 13, 2007)
Unsigned editorial also taking the U.S. to the woodshed over the recent beef fracas.
>PS: It’s not a beef issue, it’s a cultural issue.

“They haven’t really explained what this virus is. This is like SARS. They haven’t sent samples to any international body. This is really irresponsible of China. This thing could get out and affect everyone.”
(Source: New York Times, August 16, 2007)
Federico A. Zuckermann, a professor of immunology at the University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine, talking about blue-ear disease that’s swept through most of China and decimated its hog population.
>PS: Insane inflation for the Chinese food biz and another SARS style cover-up? I smell problems for next year’s Olympics.

“To assure our success and allow additional time to gather input, I am canceling plans for the rollout of all changes to our organizational structure."
(Source: CNN Money, August 17, 2007)
Margaret Glavin, FDA Associate Commissioner for Regulatory Affairs, in an e-mail written in conventional bureaucratese and sent to FDA employees backing away from the ill-advised plan to close half their food labs.
>PS: Colossally bad decision, even by fed standards, will be tossed onto the trash heap where it belongs.

Farming for votes: Campaign 2008
Barack Obama, visiting Bevery Van Fossen’s farm in Auel, Iowa to talk about rural issues and missing the point entirely, asked, “Anybody gone into Whole Foods lately and see what they charge for the arugula?” Someone asked, “What’s arugula?”

Obama went to Tama a few days later and redeemed himself with this comment: “I believe it’s time to turn the page on a politics that has turned its back on rural America. While you’re working hard to strengthen your farms, your families, and your communities, small businesses or main streets, our government has been working for big agribusiness.”

John Edwards campaigning in Sioux City, Iowa said "One of the greatest dangers we face in this country today is that of kids growing up in small towns, leaving and never coming back. This has been a very serious issue as I've seen it here in Iowa. What we want to do is create opportunities for these young people, opportunities not just in big cities but in smaller towns and rural communities."

Former Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack speaking at an Iowa corn boil for Hillary Clinton: "She brings a breadth of knowledge about rural issues to the table that many Iowans might not realize she has. We tend to think of New York as only the city but there a lot of family farms in upstate New York." His comment led to this statement at a standing-room-only rally in Council Bluffs, Iowa: Hillary Clinton answered a question on immigration by noting her experience working with upstate New York farmers who rely on migrant workers. “We have 35,000 farms in New York, most of them are family farms, they’re not very big farms, they’re mostly fruit, vegetable, dairy and, you know, vineyards, horticulture and some livestock,” she said. “You’ve got to milk those cows 365 days a year. So if [farmers] lose that source of labor, they’re not sure where they’re going to get it.”

Friday, August 17, 2007

Talking with Terry Francl, American Farm Bureau

The price of a bushel of corn and its effect on the price of just about everything else has created more nonsense on both sides of the argument than anything since Walt Disney was a pup. Is it a food vs. fuel proposition? Does converting corn to ethanol so we can feed the gas tanks of America steal food from starving Africans? Maybe shipping cheap corn to Chad actually prevents that nation from developing an Ag base that can grow its own food.

Are we artificially inflating the rush to our environmental doom by funding ethanol production with U.S. tax dollars? Or maybe it’s a sensible way for our government to protect the U.S. economy from the political uncertainties of the world’s oil supply.

There is well-known saying popularized in the U.S. by Mark Twain: “There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.” The semi-ironic statement refers to the persuasive power of numbers, and describes how accurate statistics can be used to bolster inaccurate arguments.

So we get incredibly silly photo ops like the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association’s movie time popcorn extravaganza. Forbes magazine quoted Executive director Monte Shaw - "We're here today to pop the popcorn propaganda bubble.”

Standing in front of 11 large plastic bags containing 38.5 pounds of popcorn, Shaw claimed a person could buy that amount directly from a farmer for $5. He pointed to a bag of movie theater popcorn on a nearby table and said it costs the consumer just as much, if not more and said the farmer received just a few pennies for the corn that filled those 11 bags.

The inference, of course, was theater operators were unconscionably ripping off their patrons and just using the doubling price of corn as a flimsy excuse.

Monte, you’re absolutely right about the price of corn being just a small part of the rising costs of food but your argument falls a rung or two below the top of the ladder.

Let’s take your point another step. Recently, a barrel of oil was selling for $72. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists tells me a barrel of oil equals 42 U.S. gallons of oil.

For reasons too strange and complicated to get into, they say, a 42-gallon barrel of oil can yield slightly more than 44 gallons of product. So why can’t I fill up my Chevy Blazer at my local Exxon dealer for $1.64 a gallon?

Are the folks running big oil taking a page from the local movie arcade and trying to rip me off? OK, poor analogy. But you get the basic idea. There’s more t o rising food prices than a bigger price tag for high fructose corn syrup.

To get some real answers, I’ve talked with USDA Secretary Mike Johanns, Bob Dinneen, president of the Renewable Fuels Association and Rick Tolman, CEO of the National Corn Growers Association. Not that any of them are less than honorable men, but one is a politician and two are hired guns for special interests.

I did manage to get interesting responses from each of them, though. Click on their names to go back into CattleNetwork’s archives and read their comments.

To try to get to the bottom of this I spent an interesting five minutes with Terry Francl, Senior Economist with the American Farm Bureau Federation. I know what you’re thinking, too. “An economist? Are you really trying to confuse us?” Or maybe you’re reminded of this old joke about economists and farm animals:

A man walking along a road in the countryside comes across a shepherd and a huge flock of sheep. He tells the shepherd, "I will bet you $100 against one of your sheep that I can tell you the exact number in this flock."

The shepherd thinks it over; it's a big flock so he takes the bet.

"973," says the man.

The shepherd is astonished, because that is exactly right. Says "OK, I'm a man of my word, take an animal." The man picks one up and begins to walk away.

"Wait," cries the shepherd, "Let me have a chance to get even. Double or nothing that I can guess your exact occupation."

The man says sure.

"You are an economist for a government think tank," says the shepherd.

"Amazing!" responds the man, "You are exactly right! But tell me, how did you deduce that?"

"Well," says the shepherd, "put down my dog and I will tell you."

Francl fortunately knows the difference between a merino and a mutt. It’s part of his job. He also knows about the intricate financial movements behind the rising price of a bushel of corn and its real world effect on that over-priced Jack and Coke you had last night. Here’s what he has to say. Just remember, he’s an economist so five minutes can quickly become ten…more or less.

Q. Let's look at how the price of corn affects food and feed. Food, first. Corn - from the standard #10 can on the grocer's shelf to the byproducts used in thousands of prepared foods, snacks and beverages - is probably one of the most widely used agricultural products in North America. Earlier this year, Rick Tolman, CEO of the National Corn Growers Association, told me “The farm level price of corn has very little impact on food prices. There has been virtually no correlation between price changes in corn and changes in the price of food at the retail level. The current value of corn in a $2.79 box of corn flakes is less than 7 cents. The cost of packaging, marketing, wages, energy, etc. have a much bigger impact on the price of food than do changes in the price of corn.”

It's a statement you basically agreed with when you said “Ethanol is getting a bad rap, because people aren’t looking at all the other factors that are involved in food prices.” Break it down for me: What effect does doubling the price of corn have on foods and what are some of the other factors and their effects?

A. The basic assumption that a change in the price of an ingredient will immediately affect the price of a processed product is not one that is born out in either economic theory or in the real world. There are two separate demand curves, one for the ingredient and one for the final or processed product. Just because the ingredient supply/demand conditions change does not mean the supply/demand conditions for the process product have changed and vice versa. Let’s take a look at some real world examples.

Corn prices have changed dramatically the past year so compare that level of change to some of the product prices that are in the next stage of processing. The following are average monthly year-to-year price changes, June 2006 to June 2007:

Corn, Central Illinois..........71.2%
Corn meal, NY............................25.4%
Corn starch, Midwest.....................23.6%
Regular corn syrup, MW...................20.6%
HFCS, MW.................................22.2%
Sugar-dextrose, MW.......................16.3%
CPI for non-alcoholic beverages...........4.4%

In the above example all prices have changed in the same direction, but in different proportions. The ingredient prices have increased at a rate that is from about a fourth to a third of the rate of corn, while the actual price of non-alcoholic beverages is only one-sixteenth the rate. It is estimated that there is approximately 1 cent worth of corn in a can of soda made from HFCS.

Another reality is that farmers only get a small percentage of the consumer food dollar, on average about 19% according to the latest available data. For corn flakes cereal it is estimated to be 4% and for corn syrup 3%. Beef averages close to 50%.

Obviously corn comes through the food chain in the form of many different products. About half of all the corn utilized in the United States goes through the animal and poultry sector. Any impacts from this sector are lagged and diluted. The lag comes from the fact that as feed prices rise producers first cut back feeding rates, thereby reducing the size or weight of the animal or bird being marketed.

If producer’s margins are squeezed long enough, they will eventually reduce the number of animals and birds being fed. This results in less meat and higher prices. That process may take as little as a few months for broilers to several years for beef cattle. Rarely, if ever, are all of the higher feed costs passed on to the consumer. The meat producers end up absorbing some proportion of the increased costs, thus reducing their profits, as do the processors.

So let’s look at some specifics. The weekly egg set for broilers has been running around 2% above a year ago, not a sign that a lot of money is being lost. Also, barrow/gilt and steer/heifer dressed weights are running even with 2006, indicating folks are not short feeding either species. High corn prices are discouraging placing lighter-weight feeder cattle and calves. This should, in turn, have increased 800 pound steer prices at the expense of 500 pound calves. That has not happened, due to the overall tight cattle supply situation. For pork, if they are losing money, why are they increasing the size of the breeding heard?

Looking at the issue in a broader context, we did an analysis of the impact of ethanol and higher corn prices on food prices and expenditures in conjunction with the Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute (FAPRI). This macro economic analysis suggests there will be little change in consumer food prices in 2007. By 2008, there will be about a 0.2% rise in the consumer price index for food. By 2009, the food CPI rises 0.5% higher than would have been the case without the increased ethanol production. The food CPI goes up by an extra 0.7% over the next three years.

I should note that food accounts for approximately 14% or one-seventh of the total CPI weighting. If food prices were to rise 0.7%, it would result in a 0.1% increase in the total CPI, not exactly an explosion in the inflation rate.

Consumer expenditures for food are estimated to be $2,421 per person this year. Again, it will be 2008 before consumers pay another $1 per year more than would have been the case without the increased ethanol production. The amount increases to $6 per year more in 2009 and then to $11 more the following two years. It tops out at $14 in 2012.

Total consumer expenditures for food are estimated to be $725 billion this year and $745 billion in 2007. By 2008 another $2 billion is added to food expenditure and some $3 to $4 billion per year in subsequent years. However, if this is measured against the expected saving in farm program payment, $8-10 billion per year according to the most recent CBO baseline estimates, consumers who are also taxpayers are certainly net winners.

Q. Corn makes up a much larger percentage of animal feed, particularly cattle, hogs and poultry. Richard Lobb of the National Chicken Council said “We were paying $2.40 a bushel a year ago and now it's $3.80. That's a big blow to our companies.”

As a result, the price consumers pay for boneless, skinless chicken breasts has risen from $3.01 a pound in June 2006 to $3.61 a pound the week ending June 7, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's weekly report on chicken prices. Lobb attributes that 20% increase almost exclusively to the price of corn.

People in the cattle and pork industries are making similar claims. Can you talk about the more direct costs faced by your friends in animal agriculture and how they might be able to manage those increases?

A. Again, I would emphasize that there is little, if any, relationship between the price of corn and price of cattle or poultry in the sense that corn is a causal factor. If that were true hog and turkey prices would be up too, but their respective prices are either unchanged or down slightly from a year ago. There are specific supply/demand conditions that affect each respective commodity.

Take the example of milk where farm prices have nearly doubled in the past year, a fact that is widely reported in the media. However, what is seldom mentioned is that farm milk prices declined 15% in 2006, prompting dairy farmers to halt any expansion plans. Then in 2007, not only did domestic demand stay strong, but the international demand for several processed milk products has exploded, as have milk prices. Although some try to attribute the higher milk prices to higher corn prices, one has absolutely nothing to do with the other.

As to how producers in the meat sector can manage the increase in feed costs, there are a couple of actions they might consider pursuing. First, develop an aggressive market risk program for procuring future feed needs in a cost effective manner. We are coming up on harvest time lows so now is the time to start locking in prices. The battle for acres between our four major commodities—corn, cotton, soybeans and wheat—is going to be more intense in 2008 and probably 2009. So don’t procrastinate, develop a plan and implement it now.

Second, look at the possibility of utilizing alternative ingredients in your feed ration. The most common example is DDGs, but there are many other possibilities. For example, I talked to a dairy farmer in the western U.S. that was incorporating potato byproducts in his ration to replace corn. There may be some unusual, some might say unorthodox, feed alternatives out there waiting to be discovered.

Q. Farmers have responded to the rise in the price of corn by substantially increasing acreage and the U.S. industry is reporting levels not seen since pre-WWII. Let's assume decent weather and a good harvest this year. Could you forecast the size of that harvest and what it might do to the price of corn next year?

A. At this juncture I believe the USDA numbers, as reflected in the July WASDE report, are a good base to go from. The USDA will issue an update WASDE in less than two weeks with the first field sample estimate of this year’s corn yield. At this point I would expect that yield number to be within 1-2 bushels per acre of their July estimate. Even once the August yield numbers are known that number can change over the next couple of months as a result of weather.

Finally, I would like to emphasize that we are in a world wide tight supply/demand condition for all of our major commodities.

Q. The production of ethanol is heavily subsidized by the government, a program that some say is artificially boosting the price of corn. In an editorial published in the Billings (MT), Gazette, E.C. Pasour, a fellow economist and professor emeritus in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at North Carolina State University, said this: “When all is said and done, the ethanol program is just another form of political pork that benefits the few at the expense of the many.”

Are the subsidies justified and is Pasour correct in his judgment?

A. At this juncture, the country, via their Congressional representatives, has sent a strong message that the United States needs to develop alternative energy sources via a renewable fuels program. It is not a question of if, but of how. The more productive discussion should be on the “how” and the implications for the various sectors involved, as has been covered above.

Q. Possibly ending the food vs. fuel debate, the June Producer Price Index showed food prices fell 0.8%, dropping for the second month in a row and the biggest drop since May 2006. The PPI report also showed producer prices for energy fell 1.1%, after a 4.1% surge in May. Gasoline prices sank 3.9%, in the biggest one month drop since a 13% fall in January.

One or two months don't make a trend and there are certainly more factors involved in those numbers than the price of corn but let's stay within the framework of your ethanol argument quoted in my first question. What are the most important short term factors involved in the June numbers and are they the same factors that will affect the long term prices of food and fuel?

The numbers often vary considerably month-to-month in both the PPI and CPI. The CPI is probably more relevant to consumers. Please reference the attached article “Fuel versus Food: Is It Reality or Rhetoric?”

Click here to view…


Q. Looking at the food vs. fuel argument with a worldwide perspective, Josette Sheridan of the World Food Programme said in an interview with the Financial Times that “A surge in the production of biofuels derived from corn, wheat and soybeans is helping to push up food prices so sharply that the World Food Programme, the United Nation’s agency in charge of fighting famine, is finding it difficult to feed as many hungry people as it has in the past.”

She expanded on her statement by noting that food commodity prices are surging because of a number of factors including rising demand from China and bad weather, but the potential consequences of the rising demand for biofuels has caught the attention of those in the business of feeding the world.

WFP is charged with trying to feed the world's poorest populations, but pain at that level has a way of moving up the economic ladder. Should the fears she's expressed cause concern within the agricultural community?

A. The specter of the world’s poor not having enough food is often raised in the context of various political debates. The use of renewable fuels as an energy source is no more or less important than the multitude of variables that affect the supply and demand for food and the ultimate price. The reality is that few people are unable to access food due to either the lack of supply and/or price. It usually has more to do with the political and/or economic system that affects the production and distribution of food within a country or region of the world. Where true emergencies exist, say a weather induced famine, the United States and other countries of the world typically provide food and various other forms of food aide.

While I have written several articles in which I argue that higher corn prices have had little, if any, impact of food costs to date, I readily acknowledge that higher prices have had an impact on those purchasing grain and protein for feed. There is no question that the margins associated with feeding operations have been cut significantly, to the point of causing losses in many situations. It is indeed a difficult and challenging time and I have a great deal empathy for those facing this situation. However, this is not the first time this has happened.

Shortly after I started my career as an agricultural economist in the early seventies, then President Nixon opened the U.S. market for grains to the Russians and the Chinese. Corn prices, which had been trading in the range of $1.00 to $1.50 for about two decades, jumped markedly higher and have traded in the range of $2.00 to $3.50 about 95% of the time since then. My price reference is the average annual corn price received by farmers. What happened is that there was a one-time permanent demand shift. The prices of other crop commodities that compete for land also adjusted upward as did land prices and nearly all other inputs associated with crop production. This, coupled with the application of price controls, resulted in some huge losses for cattle feeders and caused many painful adjustments in the industry.

With the advent of the increased use of ethanol we are in the process of making another one-time permanent adjustment in the demand for corn. The new range will probably be at least 50 cents, maybe $1 higher. (There are other issues at work here, such as the declining value of the U.S, dollar, but that is another separate topic.) People, not just in the United States, but throughout the world, are demanding that we increase the supply of renewable energy. As I have previously indicated, it is not a question of if, but of how we are going to do this.

At this point in time, ethanol from corn appears to be the lowest cost solution to this shift in national/international energy policy. Stated a little differently, corn ethanol requires the least incentives or subsidies, at least in the United States. Research to produce cellulosic derived ethanol is being strongly encouraged with many government dollars, but even Agriculture Secretary Johanns acknowledged last week that it would likely be at least five years before cellulosic ethanol would be technically and commercially viable. My own view is that it will most likely take 8-10 years and even then will require government incentives at least equal to, if not greater, than those currently used to encourage the production of corn based ethanol.

My final point is this: Do not believe that the increase in corn and other crop prices is a temporary situation that will be resolved by next year’s crop or the one after that. It is a permanent part of the landscape and everyone must adjust accordingly. Corn prices will continue to be affected by supply and demand conditions, but are unlikely to return to the previous range in the foreseeable future, if ever.