Global Poverty via the Ethanol Industry
by
Sabine Barnhart
by Sabine Barnhart
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The
more the state plans, the more difficult planning becomes for the
individual.
~ Friedrich Hayek
Progress
is precisely that which rules and regulations did not foresee.
~ Ludwig von Mises
Each
year in early October my grandfather summoned my entire family to
come to his farm and harvest potatoes. Hunched over on all fours,
each person quietly filled their buckets with these "earth apples."
Each year he used a different field for his crop. One year he would
plant potatoes, the next year beets or wheat. The potato replaced
the grain diet on the European continent. It became survival food,
especially during the two World Wars. Dumplings, potato salad and
mashed potatoes are only a few potato dishes found in a long list
in the European cuisine. The easy adaptability of the potato to
grow almost anywhere in the world can produce an annual crop of
322 million tons of potatoes. Many African countries greatly benefit
from growing the potatoes because they make them more self-sufficient
in their food production.
In the age
of nation building, stamping out of global warming, and driving
for energy self-sufficiency, the new state appointed rival of the
potato is maize, which is better known as corn the yellow cob-born
grain used in the production of ethanol fuel. As a blend with gasoline,
biofuel powers automobiles and farm equipment. Its environmental
friendly side effect is to reduce greenhouse gases, and some say
it is the key to everlasting energy security in the future.
Ethanol fuel
production received its first stimulus after the Arab oil crisis
in 1973. During 1978 the US federal government sealed the project
with the Energy Tax Act authorizing tax exemptions by blending gasoline
with 10 percent ethanol. A floodgate of free money opened up for
farmers and ethanol producers as the energy and agricultural departments
spent billions of dollars on subsidies. This year’s estimates are
between $5.5 billion to $7.3 billion of our tax dollars to be handed
out to corn growers.
The incentives
for farmers to grow corn in the US is not to meet the needs of a
market that entails a healthy profit. Instead, they plant corn because
they get paid to do so by a federal government interested in ethanol
production. And as it turns out, producing ethanol is an expensive
process. Archer Daniels Midland Corporation (ADM) out of Illinois,
one of the largest producers of ethanol, received as much as $10
billion in subsidies between 1980 through 1997 along with favorable
tax breaks costing taxpayers an average of $30 for every dollar
ADM earns in profits. Add to that the $500 of federal and state
subsidies it takes to reduce one metric ton of CO2-equivalent, one
can literarily say that it is governments who heat up the globe
by burning cash.
This year corn
production has already increased by 15 percent over last year. Even
President Bush, not a green lover but excited about ethanol, is
expecting that farmers will plant 90.5 millions of acres of corn
in 2007 in order to meet the demands of ethanol production of 132
billion liters by 2017. Corn prices already went up by 50 percent.
The average price per bushel of $1.95, which had held steady over
the past eight years, jumped up to $3.05 in January of this year,
and is expected to rise as high as $3.40.
Corn is feedstock.
It is consumed not only by humans but also by hogs, chickens and
cattle. The drastic side-effect of higher corn prices is now reflected
in the higher prices in the grocery store. The price of food went
up 3.9 percent last year faster than the inflation rate, which
ranges around 2.7 in 2007. In particular, pork, beef, milk, eggs
and poultry show drastic increases in their prices. So do fruits
and vegetables. Considering that most people spend an average of
10 percent of their disposable income on food, higher prices in
grocery reduces the spending on cars, homes or clothing. Health
Nazis should also be concerned, since these higher prices drive
people to cheaper processed foods that add to increased health risks
in the poor segment of the population.
The US Federal
Government’s targeted goal is to replace gasoline with corn-based
fuel as an alternative energy source. This has caught the attention
of poorer countries. Mexico, for example, is gradually replacing
agave, a spiky-leaved, large plant which grows on high and arid
land and takes eight years to reach maturity, with corn. Agave is
the main ingredient for Tequila. Mexico produced 25 to 35 percent
less agave this year and farmers take less care of their agave crop
in favor of higher corn prices. The World Food Program (WFP), which
recently stated that it can no longer feed the poor due to the impact
of biofuel demand on food prices, is foolishly encouraging African
and Latin American countries to take advantage of the rising demand
of biofuels by planting corn; a popular world practice that is now
devastating 900 million of the world’s poorest which rely on the
UN feeding program.
It is quite
clear that the state-inflated demand for corn is causing a global
imbalance in food production. Farmers are replacing a variety of
vegetables and fruits with corn due to the higher profit-per-acre
corn brings. The two-year practice of crop rotation for corn drains
the soil and requires more fertilizers on the following soybean
crop. The additional cost ends up with the consumer. As food prices
rise, it is the poor who suffer most from this inflated demand for
biofuel. It is a burden that most people cannot afford as inflation
keeps rising because of irresponsible spending and government debt.
The federal
budget for the fiscal year beginning this October called for $2.9
trillion dollars in government spending. It includes increases for
all the various cabinet-level departments. Among them were a 5.4
percent increase for the Department of Energy and 3.6 percent increase
for Agriculture. According to Richard M. Ebeling, President of The
Freeman, the average US household would have to shell out approximately
$25,845 in taxes to cover the budget. Include with it the US federal
government’s pre-existing liabilities of several trillion, and the
average US household would have to pay an additional $31,000 a year
for 75 years to pay off the debt already incurred by government
spending. How can an average income household cover the basic needs
such as food, clothing, and shelter when tax burdens already devour
the wages of a lower income population? Poor people only become
poorer as spending continues.
Republican
presidential candidate Dr. Ron Paul seems to be the only congressional
member who understands the global effects of subsidies. During his
second presidential debate the question came up about oil profits.
His response was: "I don’t think the profits are the issue. The
profits are okay if they’re legitimately earned in a free market.
What I object to are subsidies to big corporations when we subsidize
them and give them R&D (Research & Development) money. I
don’t think that should be that way. They should take it out of
the funds that they earn..."
Here lies the
answer to many of the energy questions. Let the private sector find
a solution to new energy sources. Already technology advances at
a rapid speed and its products remain ultimately competitive on
the market where prices drop and become affordable to the average
consumer. Just think of recent changes from VCRs and phonograph
records to DVD’s and CD players, and the addition of cell phones
and portable computers to modern life. All are now available at
reasonable prices to low-income households. Industry continually
comes up with new inventions that contribute highly to communication,
organization and entertainment. The only sectors that remain high
in cost with outrageous prices are sectors that are under government
regulation and control: health care, medicine, education, housing,
and now food prices. It would be a life-saving act of mercy to close
these various departments of government, if people want to have
a future for the next generation.
The
trouble caused on the global market by the federal government’s
sponsored ethanol industry increasingly outweighs the good it does.
The idea of sacrificing food production in the name of biofuel as
a future source of energy is an irrational concept. The consequence
of higher food prices due to corn production hasn’t come from consumer
choice but from government coercion. If the demand for energy is
increasing, and biofuel is the answer, then where will the world
grow its food? The big believers in a government supported biofuel
industry might have to prepare for another big tsunami to hit the
shores of Third World countries and at home if this insanity isn’t
stopped. Just don’t blame capitalism if and when it comes.
July
21, 2007
Sabine
Barnhart [send her mail]
is a native German who moved to the US in 1980 and lives in Fort
Worth, Texas.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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