Showing posts with label consumer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label consumer. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2008

Is it immoral to use food crops for fuel?

The recent surge in production of bio-fuels (fuel derived from food crops such as corn, soy, and sugarcane) both in the U.S. and around the world has sparked a debate about whether such production should be promoted or even permitted. Aside from arguments about the energy efficiency of bio-fuels, the latest criticisms have arisen from the recent rise in prices of staple foods, such as the corn used to make tortillas in Mexico. Far away from the corn fields in Iowa, yet linked by the global economy, some have expressed anger over the rapid increase in cost of a commodity they purchase daily for their sustenance. In many third-world countries, citizens have been shielded from the full effects of these cost increases through government price controls and subsidies – but these programs are straining to maintain the illusion of cheap food in the midst of a worldwide jump in food prices. Ironically, in many industrialized nations, governments have been pressured to use tax dollars to “stimulate” the production of bio-fuels through grants for bio-fuel factories, infrastructure, and subsidies for farmers – with the intent of reducing our dependence on petroleum fuels.

Key Points
  • Increased use of food crops for fuel production has reduced the amount sold for human consumption, resulting in price increases (supply & demand).
  • Where bio-fuels have been more profitable than selling crops for food, some farmers have chosen to sell their crops to the fuel producers.
  • Government price controls on food commodities have limited the profit possible to farmers, incentivizing them to seek other markets for their product.
  • Government subsidies for bio-fuel production have distorted the economic value of food crops by creating an artificial demand (using tax dollars to stimulate production in the place of buyer dollars, which would demonstrate true demand).
  • Acute shortages of subsidized bread, which is sold at less than one U.S. cent a loaf, have caused hours-long lines and violence at some sites in poor neighborhoods in Egypt in recent weeks.
  • The supply of subsidized bread has been decreasing. Many people in Egypt believe subsidized bakeries sell some of their flour on the black market rather than make bread.
  • Egypt has long been one of the top importers of U.S. wheat, but its U.S. purchases have been falling as it searches for cheaper sellers on the world market, where prices have tripled in the last 10 months.
  • Some have criticized the use of food crops for fuel as “uncaring” and an example of “lopsided priorities”, due to the effect it has had on food prices, making it more difficult for poorer people to purchase basic foodstuffs.
Commentary

Not surprisingly, those who are suffering the consequences of government manipulation of the free market are the first to cry for the government to manipulate it further. This mentality believes that all costs are determined by the power of huge corporations, greedy middlemen, and government regulators – thus creating the illusion that the economy is simply a constant struggle between greedy businessmen and “the public” (represented by government protectors), waging price wars, with both sides continually seeking the upper hand. This illusion, during times of economic hardship, leads to the cry for government to be given greater powers to control commerce and trade, and to set “fair” prices.

What is not seen or heard in this debate is the fact that in a free exchange, the price of the product is decided mutually by the buyer and seller. Absent force, neither party can demand the other buy or sell the product – they must mutually agree. Thus, a general rise in the price of a commodity would indicate that someone is willing to pay more for it, and is doing so. Attempts to manipulate such an exchange through force will always result in its collapse, for the buyer will refuse to sell (reducing the amount of product available) and the seller will refuse to buy (creating a surplus in product available). These forces cannot be changed by government edict, and those who clamor for the force of government to be exercised to impose their opinions on what should be sold for what purpose and for how much will reap the consequences of history – shortages, recession, and general economic collapse.

In a real sense, what is being demanded by those who condemn the use of food crops for bio-fuel, is that each individual farmer should not be allowed to sell the fruits of his labor for the best price he can ask. He should be constrained to use his crops only for the benefit of those determined to be “in need” – by selling it only for food use and only at a price that is deemed “fair” by those who are demanding it from him. Such a policy can only be implemented through force, and has only one possible outcome. Eventually, the farmer will cease to produce when it is no longer profitable for him to do so under the coercive terms of the “public good” – and when that happens, there will be no food to buy at any price, no matter how great the need.

In the case of food crops and bio-fuels, both sides of the equation have been manipulated by tyrants – those who wish to control the direction of the fuel industry, and those who wish to mandate the value of a simple food product. Both distortions have aggravated what might have a been a simpler development in our modern economy. When men are free to exchange, temporary disruptions like those created by the invention of bio-fuels are quickly adjusted to, and self-interested people are quick to fill the needs and desires of others, for a profit. And that motivation, whether you revile it or not, is truly what fuels the economic activity of every person on the planet.

Action Steps
  • Read “Capitalism and Freedom” by Milton Friedman (available in the F.C. Primer)
  • Ask a local farmer what determines the sale price and use of the crops he produces
  • Research the recent trends in the commodity markets – do you know the cost of the sources of your food?
  • Write your congressman and ask his/her opinion about the U.S. Farm Bill
  • Read “The Law” by Frederic Bastiat – How does the concept of “legal plunder” apply to the issues of production, free exchange, government subsidies, price controls, and other economic manipulation?

Principles: 6, 7, 8, 9, 11


References

Indian minister attacks biofuels
BBC - March 26, 2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7315308.stm

Egypt tries to tackle deadly bread crisis
CNN - March 4, 2008
http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/africa/03/24/egypt.bread.riot.ap/index.html?eref=rss_world

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Socialism vs. Capitalism: Which is the Moral System?

http://www.ashbrook.org/publicat/onprin/v1n3/thompson.html
The extraordinary level of material prosperity achieved by the capitalist system over the course of the last two-hundred years is a matter of historical record. But very few people are willing to defend capitalism as morally uplifting.

It is fashionable among college professors, journalists, and politicians these days to sneer at the free-enterprise system. They tell us that capitalism is base, callous, exploitative, dehumanizing, alienating, and ultimately enslaving.

The intellectuals’ mantra runs something like this: In theory socialism is the morally superior social system despite its dismal record of failure in the real world. Capitalism, by contrast, is a morally bankrupt system despite the extraordinary prosperity it has created. In other words, capitalism at best, can only be defended on pragmatic grounds. We tolerate it because it works.

Under socialism a ruling class of intellectuals, bureaucrats and social planners decide what people want or what is good for society and then use the coercive power of the State to regulate, tax, and redistribute the wealth of those who work for a living. In other words, socialism is a form of legalized theft.

The morality of socialism can be summed-up in two words: envy and self-sacrifice. Envy is the desire to not only possess another’s wealth but also the desire to see another’s wealth lowered to the level of one’s own. Socialism’s teaching on self-sacrifice was nicely summarized by two of its greatest defenders, Hermann Goering and Bennito Mussolini. The highest principle of Nazism (National Socialism), said Goering, is: "Common good comes before private good." Fascism, said Mussolini, is "a life in which the individual, through the sacrifice of his own private interests…realizes that completely spiritual existence in which his value as a man lies."

Socialism is the social system which institutionalizes envy and self-sacrifice: It is the social system which uses compulsion and the organized violence of the State to expropriate wealth from the producer class for its redistribution to the parasitical class.

Despite the intellectuals’ psychotic hatred of capitalism, it is the only moral and just social system.
This is one of the clearest, simplest, and most thorough essays on the difference between Capitalism and Socialism I have ever read. It also is an excellent defense of the morality of Capitalism - a defense that few intellectuals have ever proposed (other than Ayn Rand).

Thursday, July 26, 2007

The Five Stages of Counterfeiting

http://www.lewrockwell.com/north/north550.html
A truly serious counterfeiting operation would in fact plan to do something very similar to what Mr. Heath said a counterfeiter would not do – just not in a single step. The goal of a serious counterfeiting operation would be to persuade the public to use its money rather than the official bills it originally copied when it designed its original fake plates. Its goal would be the replacement of the original official bills with its own bills, making them official in the eyes of the public.

This has been the primary goal of central bankers ever since the creation of the Bank of England in 1694
Gary North's essays are always very detailed and thorough, if a bit lengthy. This article covers a very broad scope of economic history and describes the process of converting generations of people to treasure a currency once thought to be worthless. It covers precious metal debasement, fractional reserve banking, fiat money, central banks, and inflation - all in the context of a larger move to legitimize a counterfeit currency.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Bill Gates Needs an Econ Course

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2007/06/bill_gates_needs_an_econ_cours.html
At Harvard, Gates said, "We can make market forces work better for the poor if we can develop a more creative capitalism -- if we can stretch the reach of market forces so that more people can make a profit, or at least make a living, serving people who are suffering from the worst inequities."

He misses the point. Gates faults the free market for problems caused by governments. What constricts the reach of the free market is the state. Gates seems oblivious to all the ways that governments here and abroad cripple enterprise. In poor countries, corrupt bureaucracies smother entrepreneurship while enriching cronies. The lack of formal property rights and stable law keeps average people from accumulating capital. So the poor stay poor. That's what causes "scarcity of clean water" and kills "children who die from diseases we can cure."
John Stossel takes Gates to task for confusing the root causes of poverty. Once again, the only-somewhat-informed public debate looks at free markets, looks at suffering, and then determines that the free market has failed, and therefore the State should intervene (or more accurately, since it has been intervening already, it should improve its intervention).

Gates' statement at the end of this article, "We also can press governments around the world to spend taxpayer money in ways that better reflect the values of the people who pay the taxes" is especially telling. The idea that somehow problems would be solved if we just did the wrong thing in a better way is futile. Ignoring the underlying truth that individuals know best how to spend their money does the poor a disservice. The arrogant assumption that the poor - or anyone - would be better off if a benevolent dictator would take their resources and then wisely dispose of them for the greatest benefit of their former owner is a gross deception. I'm baffled that such an idea is so widely accepted...

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Economic Inequality: Process and Results

http://www.capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4803
... many people erroneously use income inequality as a measure of fairness. Income is a result. As such, results cannot establish whether there is fairness or justice.
... For the most part, income is a result of one's productivity and the value that people place on that productivity. Far more important than income inequality, there is productivity inequality. That suggests that if there's anything to be done about income inequality, we should focus on how to give people greater capacity in serving their fellow man, and we should make sure there's a climate of peaceable, voluntary exchange.
A good lesson about the real reasons why some people have a greater income than others (they create more value), and a very plain argument for why redistribution of income is morally unjustifiable.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

"A true capitalist is a steward over all the resources put in his power.
A consumer denies stewardship and thinks ownership is a license to destroy"

-- Rick Koerber

Monday, April 16, 2007

The Producer Revolution

The Producer Revolution: An Explanation
The Producer Revolution is a change in mindset which leads to changes in actions, which then lead to a transformation of a person’s physical environment, or physical world. Because of this change in mindset, Producers transcend the Consumer Condition where there is never enough, where life isn’t fair, and where the world needs to cooperate in order for them to prosper. They enter a world of self-reliance where prosperity is within their grasp—regardless of circumstance—where people have intrinsic value and material things do not; where prosperity is a result of helping and creating value for other people, rather than taking advantage of people and getting lucky; and where financial abundance is the result of a predictable formula, rather than pure chance.
Disclaimer: I am a member of the Producer Revolution - many of the thoughts posted here come from what I have learned in this organization. I recommend you read the rest of the above essay - it outlines clearly the paradigms of scarcity and abundance. If you really want to change your life (not just your external circumstances but who you are), I would highly recommend you consider joining the Producer Revolution.