Prentice,<br>
<br>
Yes. You may get flamed, but the US (and Canada) produce remarkable
food per acre and per man-hour, compared to anyone else. Technology,
the heavy industry and infrastructure for the tech to proliferate,
fertilizer, irrigation, and a continent worth of arable land. Our food
is actually pretty cheap. One guy breaking his back for an acre in the
third world works the acre cheaper than we can, but he does not produce
as much food per acre as we do, so he can't feed his neighbors.<br>
<br>
But to do this in the third world takes not just the technology, but
the infrastructure to support it, and social changes. In a society
where more food directly means more babies (because if more babies,
there is a higher chance one of them will live long enough to take care
of me in my old age), there can never be enough food. Alot has to
change, socially, politically, technologically, industrially. Plus not
everyone has as much arable land as in North America. Europe has all
the tech but is older, more crowded, less arable land per capita. <br>
<br>
Everything is complicated.<br>
<br>
Peter<br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 6/25/08, <b class="gmail_sendername">Prentice Bisbal</b> <<a href="mailto:prentice@ias.edu">prentice@ias.edu</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
> Vincent Diepeveen wrote:<br> >><br> >> Some 3d world country managers are begging to adress this issue: "My<br> >> nations people die,<br> >> as your bio fuel raises our food prices, the poor are so poor here,<br>
>> they use that stuff as food<br> >> and cannot afford it now".<br> <br> <br><rant><br> All this discussion of politics is completely off topic for this list,<br> but with all this talk about food shortages, I feel I need to state the<br>
obvious facts that everyone overlooks. I'm sure I'll get flamed for<br> this, but I don't care:<br> <br> The United States alone produces enough grain to feed the entire world.<br> This was true when I was taught this in 3rd grade, and with modern<br>
technology (genetic engineering, automated farm equipment, etc.), that<br> is even more true today.<br> <br> People are starving in other parts of the world because of political or<br> economic factors. There have been multiple cases of the US or UN<br>
providing food to starving countries only to have the tyrannical<br> dictator hoard the food for his ruling class and not distribute it to<br> the general population.<br> <br> And then there's Myanmar... The government refused aid, and watched as<br>
its people died, rather than accept help.<br> <br> Those are political examples. For economics, consider foreign<br> governments not bothering to provide aid to starving countries b/c that<br> country has nothing to offer in return.<br>
<br> Watch the movie "Hotel Rwanda". I guarantee you that if Rwanda had<br> exploitable oil reserves, the US would have intervened almost<br> immediately. What happened there was *MUCH* worse than what the Iraqis<br>
suffered under Hussein. The difference? Iraq has oil, and Rwanda does not.<br> <br> To reitierate: The US alone can produce more than enough grain to feed<br> the whole world. If people are starving, it's because of politics and<br>
economics, not an inability of the world's farmer to grow enough crops.<br> <br> All this talk about biofuels causing people to starve is a load of crap.<br> I won't even speculate with BS like this originates.<br>
<br><br> >><br> >> USA nor Europe can *never* produce that stuff as cheap as 3d world<br> >> countries can.<br> >><br> <br> <br>Vincent, you are completely off-base here. The US (and the rest of the<br>
modern world) can produce crops cheaper than anyone else. Modern<br> machinery, which 3rd world farmers don't have, reduce labor costs<br> drastically and can run around the clock. While human labor might be<br> significantly cheaper somewhere else, what 2 US farmers can accomplish<br>
with modern machinery would take hundreds (thousands?) of manual<br> laborers to produce elsewhere.<br> <br> For example, John Deere make a tractor that runs on GPS. A farmer can<br> program it, and then let it do it's thing. Since it runs by GPS, it runs<br>
itself 24 hours a day, doesn't miss any of the crop, nor overlap, for<br> maximum efficiency. Someone justs has to make sure it doesn't run out of<br> gas. That's much easier than hundreds of laborers swinging scyths<br>
somewhere in Africa or Asia, and I bet it's much cheaper per pound of<br> grain produced per unit of time.<br> </rant><br> <br> --<br> <br>Prentice<br> <br>_______________________________________________<br> Beowulf mailing list, <a href="mailto:Beowulf@beowulf.org">Beowulf@beowulf.org</a><br>
To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit <a href="http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf">http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf</a><br> </blockquote></div><br>