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Boom,
Bust, Dust
by
Doug French
by Doug French
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Boom, bust
and dust: That was the story of what my parents always referred
to as the "dirty thirties," or the Dust Bowl. The Great
American Dust Bowl steeled the resolve of a generation of Midwesterners.
The hard-earned lessons they learned have been passed on to their
baby-boomer prodigy but have been forgotten. Unlike the New Orleans
floods, there was no FEMA to house the victims in trailer cities:
only days on end of coating ones nostrils with Vaseline to filter
the dust and try to breathe.
John Steinbeck’s
The
Grapes of Wrath famously told the story of those who fled
the Dust Bowl. Pulitzer Prize-winning author Timothy Egan tells
the individual stories of a handful of families that stayed and
endured America’s worst environmental catastrophe in his masterful
book, The
Worst Hard Time.
Anyone
who has made the drive through western Kansas, eastern Colorado
and the panhandles of Oklahoma and Texas knows the eerie blankness
of the land. Miles can be driven without seeing a tree. The occasional
town encountered seems to be in a time warp.
This land was
made for buffalo grazing and little else, with its 20-inch annual
rainfall. But with the buffalo and Indian long gone by the turn
of the century, immigrant families flocked to what Egan calls No
Man’s Land to homestead their share of the American dream. In 1914,
53,000 families staked their claims in the Great Plains, living
in sod huts, often infested with centipedes and snakes. The government
even provided free train rides to pilgrims who wished to settle
on the harsh land.
The First World
War then set off a series of events that would lead to disaster.
The dry-land farmers had enjoyed prosperity, working the land and
growing wheat with the benefit of new machinery that made them wondrously
productive. Then the Turkish navy kept Russian wheat from making
its way to Europe and the federal government told farmers to produce
more wheat to win the war. And produce they did; from 1917 to 1919,
the number of acres put into wheat production increased 70 percent.
And why not: the government guaranteed a price of $2 per bushel.
But when the
war ended, the price collapsed and there was no one to buy the mountains
of grain left rotting in the sun. The debts incurred to buy equipment
and property still had to be paid, so farmers continued to plow
up the grassland in hopes that the price of wheat would rebound.
By 1931, 33 million acres in the Great Plains had been plowed. But
farmers could only sell the wheat for half what it cost to produce
the golden grain, if they could find buyers at all. And then the
winds came.
The black blizzards
began in earnest in 1932 and would continue through the end of the
decade. These storms would carry enough static electricity that
people would avoid shaking hands because the shock would flatten
a person. With no rain and temperatures exceeding more than 110
degrees for days on end, more and more bugs appeared. Grasshoppers
swarmed over fields; centipedes by the bucketful infested houses,
along with Black Widow spiders and Tarantulas. Rabbits multiplied
while the people choked from the dust.
Egan’s story
of despair reaches a crescendo with the chapter chronicling Black
Sunday April 14, 1935, a day that started out unusually calm and
clear, but would turn into a nightmare that no horror movie could
match. The author has accounts of this duster to end all dusters
from cities all over the Great Plains: from Bismarck, North Dakota
to Amarillo, Texas.
When the storm
passed through Kansas, it was 200 miles wide with winds like a tornado.
Daytime turned to night as the wall of dust blocked the sun.
A March 28th
article in USA Today provides a reminder of Egan’s book and
the potential for another Dust Bowl. The War on Terror has set the
Federal Reserve’s money printing press on overdrive. The flood of
dollars, combined with increased food demand from China and India,
has led to soaring grain prices. "Wheat was $4 or $5 a bushel
a couple years ago," South Dakota farmer-rancher Kevin Baloun
told USA Today, "and now it’s up to $10 or $12 a bushel."
So, Baloun has plowed up virgin grassland to plant crops.
However, "Judged
as a businessman, the typical farmer would make a good veterinarian,"
Bill Bonner wrote on LRC a year ago. "Over and over, he walks
into the same trap. When prices go up, he borrows in order to expand
his holdings. He buys more equipment. He leases more land. And he
plants more crops to take advantage of the high prices."
And of course
the big Ag boondoggle is ethanol. Just as when the federal government
told farmers during WWI to grow wheat to win the war, a year ago
Congress voted to double production of corn-based ethanol and so
a "third of the U.S. corn crop could be dedicated to making
fuel," the USA Today reports. "There are over 140
ethanol production plants throughout 22 states across the country,"
crows the National Corn-to-Ethanol Research Center website and another
61 plants are on the drawing board. No wonder the price of corn
has soared from less than $2 per bushel in January 2005 to over
$6 today.
To Bill Bonner’s
point: some of these plants may not get built. "Now, with corn prices
well over $5 a bushel, corn ethanol economics have gone out the
window," Michael Jackson, president and chairman of Vancouver-based
ethanol maker Syntec Biofuel, told the Associated Press last week.
However, most
of the decline in farmland has come from urban development, Doug
Casey pointed out during the Casey Research’s Crisis & Opportunity
Summit recently. And native grasslands in America declined by 24
million acres in the two decades between 1982 and 2002 according
to USA Today, not including the acres converted to new home
subdivisions during the easy money Fed-induced housing boom from
2002 to 2007. All of America’s cities have been built and are expanding
on the nation’s best farmland and grassland.
So government
polices are crashing headlong into each other in the nation’s heartland:
High grain prices, spurred by ethanol production mandates, create
the incentive for farmers to leave the Conservation Reserve Program
(costing taxpayers $2 billion a year) that pays farmers not to farm.
Sue
Kirchhoff and Jeff Martin, writing for the nation’s daily newspaper,
worry that there "would be about 1.8 million fewer sedge wrens,
grasshopper sparrows, dickcissels, bobolinks and western meadowlarks,"
if more fallow acres are plowed up to grow food and fuel for humans.
But politicians are hearing the farmers sing, not the birds. The
former vote, the later do not.
"Soybeans
will pack a bigger punch than sub-prime," Casey Research economist
Bud Conrad told the Casey Summit crowd in Scottsdale. "Agriculture
has been left in the dust, but it won’t stay there."
After the farmers
have their day, the dust will come again.
April
7, 2008
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
Copyright
© 2008 Doug French
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French Archives
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