Showing posts with label production. Show all posts
Showing posts with label production. Show all posts

Monday, August 25, 2008

Paying More Than 30 Cents at the Pump is Madness

It costs five cents per gallon to produce and to distribute gasoline. That's it! The price at the pump in Iraq and Iran is five cents. In Venezuela the price is 12 cents, because their crude is full of gunk that must be removed. Since the Russian Mafia controls their distribution, $1.00 is the price there. The Brits and the Israelis pay an $8.00 per gallon tab at the pump. Why? Socialists think car ownership is a luxury and they controlled gas pricing in the past.
Americans are mad to pay more than 30 cents [18 cents of it in taxes] per gallon at the pump.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Where Has All the Rice Gone?


The Internet is buzzing over the decision by Sam's Club and a few Costco outlets to limit bulk rice purchases to customers. Rice rationing in the United States! How long before food riots in San Francisco?

How the World Works has been accused by some readers of peddling a relentless supply of doom of late, but when the price of the staple food of half the planet's population triples in less than five months, governments get nervous. It's a big story, and unlike in the case of corn (biofuels) or wheat (bad weather) there is no easy villain to blame. World rice production is up, but demand is up more. Production gains are not keeping up with population growth and increased consumption.

With that in mind, here's a rice-related item that's gotten a little less coverage than possible rice hoarding in the world's richest country. According to a report in Monrovia, Liberia's The News, the chief executive officer of China's China-Africa Development Fund pledged 5 billion dollars of investment in African agriculture over the next 50 years -- including, specifically, rice production. (Thanks to China Digital Times for the link.)

Mr. Chi Jianxin, at a head of a Chinese delegation, is in the country to explore investment opportunities in the agricultural sector.

Chi said his company has the financial capacity and expertise to develop and stabilize the food situation in Liberia "particularly in rice production and other cash crops."

During an acquaintance visit with Liberia's Agriculture Minister Chris Toe, the Chinese delegation summed up its exploratory visit in averring that an increased investment in the agricultural sector would provide more food as well as jobs for thousands of Liberians

The announcement isn't going to move the price of rice this year, or next, but it's a pretty clear indicator of which way the world has to go if global food production is to be boosted to match world demand while keeping prices affordable. The developed world, (and in this case, we'll include China in that category, with its $1.68 trillion dollars worth of currency reserves) must find ways to invest in Africa, where there is labor, and land, and a desperate need for inputs, both financial and physical. How about it -- Africa: breadbasket of the world, instead of basket case?

-- Andrew Leonard, Salon.com

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Feed Yourself, Pilgrim

The Pennsylvania Dutch are among the premiere people of the world.

Feed Yourself, Pilgrim

The Reverend Thomas Malthus said the population expands much faster than the food supply. However grim, this appeals to common sense. This ignores the tremendous growth of production inherent in our capitalistic system.
We could feed the world if we were of a mind to.
The world distribution system is based on free trade and cheap transportation costs. The RAPID rise in transportation costs has given a more rapid rise to food prices [due to speculation].
Further, the present system involves a relatively few number of big players. They control world prices to a large extent. When they panic, we all suffer. Worse, the people with incomes less than a dollar per day face starvation.
It is a great idea for everybody to start a garden on his property.