Column for week of May 26, 2014 The diversion of 40 percent of US corn production into ethanol greatly increased the demand for corn and the price of corn. It may seem obvious that this has made farming more profitable. A closer look is warranted. The sudden increase in corn prices and the ripple effect increase in prices for other crops did substantially increase farmers' profits. Will this increase hold up? The value and price of resources used to produce any product depend on the value and price of the product produced. Farm land in one of the main resources used to produce crops. With more money to spend farmers and farm land investors quickly bid up the price of land. This gave farm land owners a big boost in net worth. It is important to distinguish between income from farming and income from owning farm land. The non farming land owners gained as much from the increase in land prices as did farmers who owned land. For farmers who didn't own the land they farmed the cost of renting or buying that land went up. All they gained was a brief boost in profits while the price of farm land caught up with the higher crop prices. The initial crop price increase made it profitable to farm land that was not being planted. As this land comes into production it moderates the initial crop price increases. The initial bubble in crop prices cannot be sustained without some new factor pushing prices up. Once acres planted and the price of farm land fully adjusts to the higher crop prices, profits from farm operations will drop back to their former levels. The only sustained gains will be the increased land values. The higher values of farm land will benefit those who sell or rent their land for higher prices. Owners who farm their own land in effect rent their land to themselves. The benefit to them will come from owning the land, not from farming it. These farmers could capture the same gains by selling their land. All that they would lose by selling would be the profits from operating the farm. Some may say the ethanol boost in crop prices is still a good deal for farmers. Some gained and the rest are no worse off than before. We still haven't seen the end to the story. Ethanol production is inefficient and wasteful. It exists only because government forces people to buy ethanol and subsidizes production with tax dollars. Ethanol production is an artificial bubble. Such bubbles are always in danger of bursting. When the ethanol bubble bursts crop prices will crash and farm land values will crash with them. Farmers and all farm land owners will then pay for the profits gained during the inflation of the ethanol bubble. Farming and farm land ownership will be disastrously chaotic until a new equilibrium is established with lower crop prices and lower farm land prices. The economic pain from the readjustment is likely to exceed the then nearly forgotten benefits during the inflation of the bubble. The ethanol blessing to farmers will end as a curse for most who fail to sell their land before the bust. Those who didn't increase their debt because of the higher land values may ride the bubble up and down without great loss. They won't gain either. It is anybody's guess when the bubble will burst. Some may believe it never will. I'm not betting that they will be right. History isn't on their side. Whatever happens the ethanol bubble will cast a dark shadow over the entire agricultural economy until the bubble is deflated. It will be much like living on the side of a volcanic mountain waiting for the eruption. This seems like a high price to pay for a few years of mostly false prosperity. In the end all higher crop prices accomplish is to increase the price of farm land. Once the adjustment period is over, farming is no more profitable than before. aldmccallum@gmail.com * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Copyright 2014 Albert D. McCallum
Considering the issues of our times. (ADM does not select or endorse the sites reached through "Next Blog.")
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Does Ethanol Benefit Farmers?
No Job Snow Job
Column for week of May 19, 2014 Rarely does a day pass that I don't read about someone fretting that new jobs aren't showing up fast enough. This lament may replace complaining about the weather as the nation's number one pastime. Of course, the lack of new jobs is the President's fault. This is only fair. If there were millions of new jobs, the President would get the credit. Never mind that the President has about as much ability to create new jobs as a meteorologist has to change the weather. It is embedded in our folklore that the President controls the economy. It would take far more than a single column to even begin to explore why the President is credited with these shaman like powers. Perhaps a bit of understanding about jobs would help to demystify the President. Hours worked and productivity per worker are all but certain to shrink during a recession. New workers aren't needed to increase productivity. In the early stages of a recovery the existing work force works harder and more efficiently. There is no need for new employees until the old employees are producing at full capacity. Huge fringe benefits and other costs of adding new employees encourage employers to work existing employees to the limit before hiring new employees. The work force is dynamic, not static. Even during years when there isn't any net change in the number of jobs, millions lose their jobs and millions find new jobs. Increases in the number of jobs don't mean that layoffs have ended. Millions file unemployment claims during the most prosperous of years. One reason productivity grew in recent years is the increased efficiency that technology brought to manufacturing. The trend of downsizing the manufacturing work force has been with us for decades. It isn't over yet. Some people see this loss of manufacturing jobs as a bad thing. For those who lose their jobs, it definitely has a downside, in the short term at least. Usually workers who lose their jobs to innovation eventually get a more productive, better paying job. The increased productivity of manufacturing jobs lowers prices. It benefits everyone. It makes no sense to preserve inefficient and costly manufacturing jobs just to reduce job loss. New jobs producing things which we don't now have is the answer. Until imaginative, creative people with access to investment capital find the ways to create new production, employment growth will remain small. Neither the President nor all of the President's men can create those jobs. All government can do is create welfare jobs. A welfare job is one where the "employee" doesn't produce enough to pay his wages. The government forces others to make donations to the "employee." Disguising these welfare payments as wages only thinly conceals that the "employee" is on the dole. The government may pay for welfare jobs with tax dollars. Or, it may force private employers to keep employees that aren't needed for production. Either way the results are the same -- higher costs and a lower standard of living for everyone. Government interference with the economy and employers serves mainly to stifle the creativity and initiative essential to create new jobs. The only way to create the millions of new jobs to replace the old ones is for government to get out of the way and unleash the creativity of entrepreneurs in the marketplace. Those who claim that government action is essential to create new jobs are giving us a snow job that won't create the new jobs the unemployed workers need. This is one more case of government being the problem, not the solution. aldmccallum@gmail.com * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Copyright 2014 Albert D. McCallum
Friday, May 23, 2014
Leaders or Drivers?
Column for week of May 12, 2014 Often I hear the lament that we don't have leaders today. What is a leader? What distinguishes a leader from the herd? Those who follow a leader do so because they want to. They believe they will benefit from following and supporting the leader. When a rancher wants to move a herd of cattle he doesn't hire leaders, he hires drivers. The drivers will coerce the cattle to go where the cattle may not want to go. The cattle go where the drivers want to avoid the unpleasantness threatened by the drivers. Sometimes drivers resort to another tactic. They might string a trail of food to where they want the herd. The cattle may go for the short term benefit of following the food, even though they end up in pens at the slaughter house. We don't have leaders in government for one simple reason. Government doesn't lead, it drives. Government tries to herd people to where it wants them. An honest leader must consider what the would be followers want and make a credible offer to get them where they want to go. Leadership is possible only where the would be followers are free to reject the goals of the wannabe leader. Those in government today have accumulated so much power they feel no need to lead. The first response is to drive. "There ought to be a law" is the cry of the driver. Translated it means "I don't care where you want to go, I'll hurt you if you don't go where I want you." The drivers also often string a trail of crumbs to the holding pens. Many voters with their noses to the ground lapping up the crumbs don't see, or even seem to care, where they will end up. All they want is more crumbs. Big, all powerful government will never produce real leaders, only drivers. Leadership is possible only when people are free to refuse to follow. Those who resort to the government tactic of "Do it my way, or I will hurt you," will never be leaders. They tell people what they should want and attempt to drive them to it. They may at times claim to be concerned about what people want. As soon as the pretend leaders grasp the power to drive, they drop all pretense of leadership and crack the whip. If this country is to survive, we must quit looking to "Do it my way, or I will hurt you" government for our salvation. Instead we must look to the private sector and voluntary cooperation. Leaders earn their stripes and stars. They don't take them by force. Individuals will work hard for a leader who holds out hope of leading them to their goals. They only stagger along when driven. Of course, when followers discover a leader is deceiving them, they will abandon him. This freedom of choice gives rise to spontaneous order where everyone seeks to serve others in order to get others to serve them. The successful leaders are the ones who lead people to where they want to go. The leader doesn't set the goals, he only, executes a plan to achieve the goals. A leader may persuade individuals to change their goals. The choice to change is freely made by the followers because they believe the new goals serve them better, and will be more satisfying than the old ones. The force of government drivers can only bring division, strife and poverty. What happened in the former Soviet Union is the ultimate end that all government drivers will achieve. Only in the seemingly chaotic spontaneous order produced in an environment of freedom and choice can we achieve and maintain peace and prosperity. Looking for government and its drives to force us to peace and prosperity is as hopeless and looking for orchids in a snowdrift. We must have leaders, not drivers. aldmccallum@gmail.com * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Copyright 2014 Albert D. McCallum
Thursday, May 8, 2014
Good Politics, Bad Government
Column for week of May 5, 2014 The battle over increasing the minimum wage isn't going away. It is unlikely to even cool down before the November election. When politicians consider which issues to support, their first thought usually is, What will snare the most votes? Poles show overwhelming voter support for increasing the minimum wage. It would take principles and moral courage to oppose increasing the minimum wage. Both are in short supply in the realm of politics. There is a down side to supporting the minimum wage increase. What if voters figure out that a higher minimum wage hurts the poorest and least skilled workers? What if voters discover that increasing the minimum wage increases unemployment and reduces average income? Studies of voters' attitudes suggest that voters who are aware of the downside of minimum wage increases don't support the increases. Those politicians who bet their careers on campaigning to increase the minimum wage are counting on voters not seeing the down side to the increase. This isn't a high risk gamble. Since the beginning of elections, politicians have been betting on fooling the voters -- and winning most of those bets. They can fool some of the voters all of the time and all of the voters some of the time. Usually that is enough to win an election. Even the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) doesn't buy the idea that a minimum wage increase is free manna from D.C. The CBO estimates that increasing the minimum wage from $7.50 per hour to $10.10 an hour will cost 500,000 to 1,000,000 jobs. This shouldn't surprise anyone. Raise the price of nails or bread and sales will decrease. The same principle applies when increasing the price of labor. Even 500,000 workers with zero earnings, instead of $7.50 an hour, adds up to $3,750,000 per hour. If those jobs were all full time at 2,000 hours per year the total lost wages would be $7.5 billion. That almost qualifies for being real money. Let's toss in something that even the dumbest and shadiest of politicians might understand. It means $7.5 billion that won't be subject to income tax, sales tax, Social Security tax, or any other tax. I won't even try to guess how much it will increase unemployment claims and welfare payments. Besides, the unemployed won't be gaining work experience that would increase their productivity and pave their way to higher paying jobs in the future. Who knows how much mischief those idle hands will find to occupy their time? Government can't legislate higher incomes. Only increased productivity can increase the average income. The most government can do is take from one pocket and put into another. While doing the "take and put" government gets its cut. And, usually a few dollars float away in the breeze. Government may increase the average wage while decreasing the average income. Consider a simple example. An employer has two employees earning $8.00 per hour. He planned to hire another at $8.00 an hour. With the increase in the minimum wage the employer provides only the two jobs for his original employees at $10.10 per hour. Instead of having three employees with total pay of $24.00 per hour, he has two with total pay of $20.20 per hour. Average pay for the two employees has increased from $8.00 per hour to $10.10 per hour. Include the unemployed worker and average income drops to $6.73 per hour. Increasing the minimum wage may be good politics that wins elections. It is bad economics and bad government. For politicians the best of both worlds is to loudly support a minimum wage increase and lose. The voters will love the politician for trying. The politician won't have to face the detrimental impact of actually increasing the minimum wage. So long as good politics makes bad government, we can expect an over abundance of bad government. aldmccallum@gmail.com * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Copyright 2014 Albert D. McCallum
Thursday, May 1, 2014
Is "Smart Ignoramus" an Oxymoron?
Column for week of April 28, 2014 Words are commonly misused and misunderstood. A few years ago a television show asked the question "Are you smarter than a fifth grader?" Perhaps the person who asked the question was ignorant as pond scum. Or, perhaps he intended to deceive. With the possible exception of fifth grade teachers, fifth graders know more about what is taught in fifth grade than anyone else. Also, they know more about fifth grade subjects than they will ever again know. This doesn't mean that as fifth graders age they grow dumber. Everyone soon forgets most of what they learn in school. Mainly we remember only the things we continue to use. Forcing students to dwell on facts and processes until they learn them is of little lasting benefit. If they have no interest in the subject matter and don't use it, they will soon forget most of it. The mere fact people forget doesn't mean they are dumb. Asking whether you are smarter than a fifth grader confuses knowledge with intelligence. If knowledge is intelligence, computers are the smartest things on earth. In reality computers are dumber than pond scum. People do all of the thinking for the computer. Computers reflect the intelligence, or lack of intelligence, of the programmers. Intelligence is the ability to reason, analyze knowledge, and solve problems. Being able to memorize solutions and parrot them back isn't intelligence, though it may fool some people. Ignorance is the absence of knowledge. It is curable. The ability to think and reason can be developed as can athletic skills. In both cases lack of inherent skills puts severe limits on development. We are all mostly ignorant. No one knows more than a small fraction of all of the world's knowledge. This isn't a serious problem. The problem arises when individuals are ignorant about the things they believe they know and claim to understand. Such ignorance doesn't mean they are dumb. "Smart ignoramus' isn't an oxymoron. It isn't even an uncommon condition. Smart ignoramuses are dangerous. A brilliant mind starting from false premises can reason its way to devastatingly bad conclusions. Why do smart people remain ignorant regarding matters about which they claim to be experts? There are number of possibilities. Carelessness and arrogance lead the list. Some people are so confident of their ideas and conclusions that they resent anyone even suggesting that they should reexamine their basic premises. Sigmund Freud is a classic example of this. He turned on associates and friends who dared to question his basic beliefs. An arrogant ignoramus who refuses to learn when he is wrong faces a harsh reckoning with reality, if he ever bumps up against reality. Such people do their best to insulate themselves from reality. Individuals in the private sector find it hard to avoid reality. When they arrogantly insist on repeating their mistakes, bankruptcy has a way of ending those mistakes. The arrogant ignorant have better lives in universities and government. They may prosper while inflicting their ignorance on others. Most of the problems we face today in matters such as the economy, climate change, education, etc. are the product of voters being dazzled by brilliant ignoramuses who build houses of cards on false premises they refuse to reexamine. Many of these people never examined the premises they blindly follow. They accept false premises learned from others. Anyone who refuses to examine and defend his basic premises is a candidate for the "Ignorant Ignoramus" list. Such people can be right. Usually they aren't. Don't be blinded by brilliance. Investigate the premises underlying the conclusions of the brilliant ones. Don't follow them to destruction. aldmccallum@gmail.com * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Copyright 2014 Albert D. McCallum
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