Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
Deere 4440 cab tractor racked up $18,000 at farm retirement auction
Indiana legislature passes bills for ag land purchases, broadband grants
Make spring planting safety plans early to avoid injuries
Michigan soybean grower visits Dubai to showcase U.S. products
Scientists are interested in eclipse effects on crops and livestock
U.S. retail meat demand for pork and beef both decreased in 2023
Iowa one of the few states to see farms increase in 2022 Ag Census
Trade, E15, GREET, tax credits the talk at Commodity Classic
Ohioan travels to Malta as part of US Grains Council trade mission
FFA members learn about Australian culture, agriculture during trip
Timing of Dicamba ruling may cause issues for 2024 planting
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   
’Twas the bailout before Christmas

Before ya’ll go gettin’ cheery-cheeked and weepy-eyed for Christmas, Old Scrooge here has some sour facts that will be waitin’ for you on the backside of the holiday season.

Fact No. 1: After Secretary of Treasury Henry Paulson’s bailout of banking giant Citigroup, the total amount of government cash thrown into this year’s credit mess is an estimated $7.8 trillion. How big a pile is that?

Well, ciphered one wag recently, Thomas Jefferson’s $15 million purchase of the Louisiana Territory in 1803 would be worth, in today’s dollars, $217 billion. That magnificent sum, though, is less than 3 percent of what Washington has given the corporate plungers since March.

That’s right. Jefferson got all or part of 15 states-to-be (including ag giants Iowa, Nebraska and Kansas), a slice of a couple of future Canadian provinces and 530 million acres for $15 million, or less than 3-cents an acre, while Old Hem-and-Haw Hank got nothin’ more than more promises for your $7.8 trillion.

Guess that’s the difference between ’em. Jefferson was a member of the still-alive breed of land-lovin’ farmers. Paulson is a member of the now-extinct breed of investment bankers.

Fact No. 2: In 2007 the United States borrowed $800 billion, or $4 billion every working day, from the world to run its government while China accumulated a current account surplus of $262 billion - much of which was then loaned back to the United States.

As such, argues Niall Ferguson in his new book The Ascent of Money, “(T)he People’s Republic of China has become banker to the United States of America.”

OK, so the sunny side of this is if we spend all our Christmas dollars at Walmart rather than in our rural community, China might be able to loan us, oh, say, $7.8 trillion next year so we might be able to keep juggling our debt until our children and grandchildren are forced to either catch it or be crushed by it?

Exactly! Hey, it ain’t much of a plan, but it’s the only one we got.
Fact No. 3: According to a Nov. 30, Minneapolis Star Tribune story titled “In search of cheap food,” the “U.S. consumption of palm oil has tripled from 324,000 tons in 2005 to 1 million tons today.”
Whoa, Santa.

In response to the Food and Drug Administration’s 2006 trans fat labeling requirement, most American food makers (such as Nabisco, Brachs and General Mills, the story reports) have swapped their trans fat soy oil for saturated fats like palm?

Indeed, notes the American Soybean Assoc. “Over the past three years, the cumulative 10 percent drop (in U.S. soy oil usage) due to the trans fat labeling requirement displaced more than 4.6 billion pounds of edible soybean oil” in America, most of which, ASA adds, went into biodiesel. (Uh oh, the old food versus fuel thing. Nah-uh, ain’t going there.)

Most nutritionists agree that palm oil is less harmful to your health than the trans fat in soy. Shoot, man, even the ASA agrees. Both, however, quickly add that any benefits from making the switch probably go by the way if you eat three times more palm oil than you did before.

But, hey, this is America; we’re still overweight, still hungry and, OK, still a little irrational. I mean, we choose palm over soy because we worry about our health.

Then we eat three times more and, later, this new appetite “now ranks Indonesia as the world’s third-largest producer of carbon, behind the United States and China, because of farmers’ practices of burning down rainforest to plant oil palm.”

Sounds about right; right?

Hey, anybody see Tiny Tim? I sent him for a sack of coal a couple of hours ago …

The views and opinions expressed in this column are those of the author, and not necessarily those of Farm World.

12/10/2008