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Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Michael Saunby
 
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Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002


"Torsten Brinch" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 20 Dec 2002 16:35:43 -0000, "Hamish Macbeth"
wrote:


"Torsten Brinch" wrote in message
.. .
On Fri, 20 Dec 2002 13:49:50 GMT, "Michelle Fulton"

.

It should be the exception, rather than the rule, that a society needs
to subsidize the production of basic necessities for survival.



Society has to provide for the poor. This can be done by either a
minimum wage that is liveable in a free market, social payments or
subsidise in the basics. snip stuff re social welfare policy


That already assumes that the society is removed from a situation in
which it needs to subsidise the production of basic necessities for
survival. I agree that an appropriate safety net must be in existence
in such a society, to the effect that noone drops out at the bottom.
It is entirely unclear how current cap payments are meant to provide
for the poor.


Well until the affordable distribution of milk was made possible in the UK,
first by railways, then by tarmac roads, rickets was a common problem in
urban UK. So perhaps the historical developments that have brought us to
where we are might shed some light on the problem. Jim's most likely the
man with the answers.

Michael Saunby




  #153   Report Post  
Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Tim Lamb
 
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Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002

In article , Torsten Brinch
writes
No, it is the assumed default among reasonable men. It is the
presence, not the absence of a subsidy that must have a special
explanation attached to it. It does not make sense to ask, why some
enterprise should -not- have a subsidy.


How about conspiracy theory?

In a country without a command economy is it easier for government to
control agricultural production with or without paying subsidy?



regards


--
Tim Lamb
  #154   Report Post  
Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Jim Webster
 
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Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002


Michelle Fulton wrote in message
.com...

"Jim Webster" wrote in message
...

As in Europe many industries are subsidised, either directly, or by
being given tax breaks, the idea that agriculture should some how

stand
alone is interesting to say the least.


It's especially interesting to me because it seems the only industry

that we
can't live without, literally.


A friend of mine who farms was at a family do three or four years ago,
and the husband of a cousin pointed out that we didn't need to produce
beef in the UK as they could import it as cheap as they wanded from
Zimbabwe.

(As an aside I wonder why he couldn't see the obvious writing on the
wall, given that Mugabee has hardly been hiding his aims for the last
decade or two.)

Funnily enough my friend has been waiting enthusiastically for the next
family wedding, to ask whether his cousins husband is still getting
plenty of Zimbabwean beef.


--
Jim Webster

"The pasture of stupidity is unwholesome to mankind"

'Abd-ar-Rahman b. Muhammad b. Khaldun al-Hadrami'




M




  #156   Report Post  
Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Jim Webster
 
Posts: n/a
Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002


Michael Saunby wrote in message
...
Well until the affordable distribution of milk was made possible in

the UK,
first by railways, then by tarmac roads, rickets was a common problem

in
urban UK. So perhaps the historical developments that have brought us

to
where we are might shed some light on the problem. Jim's most likely

the
man with the answers.


the history of milk in the UK is interesting. At one point urban milk
was produced by urban cow keepers. My own great grandfather kept cows in
a street in down and walked them down what is now the main drag to
graze. Americans note that this was no clapper board and timber town but
an industrial town with about 60,000 inhabitants and at the time had the
worlds biggest bessimer converter and was producing some of the largest
warships in the world.
With the railways it was possible for more milk production to move out
of town, prior to that most rural dairy farmers had actually made and
sold cheese and butter. Unfortunately milk is a product with a short
shelf life and there was no security in the collection. My father as a
boy working on one farm was always given the job of going to the top of
the lane to see if the company had bothered to collect the milk.
The Milk Marketing Board did two things. It put some stability into the
system, but more importantly it also vastly improved the quality of the
product. My father can tell tales of how before the war lads on milk
rounds could get nine pints to the gallon with the aid of a convenient
waterbutt.
One old lady used to come to the door with her jug and tell them if she
wanted water, she would add it herself later.


--
Jim Webster

"The pasture of stupidity is unwholesome to mankind"

'Abd-ar-Rahman b. Muhammad b. Khaldun al-Hadrami'


Michael Saunby






  #157   Report Post  
Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Jim Webster
 
Posts: n/a
Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002


Michael Saunby wrote in message
...


So why do education, police, health, telecoms, rail, fireservice, etc.

all
receive subsidy?



add to the list ship building, car factories, air lines and new
factories in development areas.


--
Jim Webster

"The pasture of stupidity is unwholesome to mankind"

'Abd-ar-Rahman b. Muhammad b. Khaldun al-Hadrami'


Michael Saunby




  #158   Report Post  
Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Torsten Brinch
 
Posts: n/a
Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002

On Fri, 20 Dec 2002 21:50:34 +0000, Tim Lamb
wrote:

In article , Torsten Brinch
writes
No, it is the assumed default among reasonable men. It is the
presence, not the absence of a subsidy that must have a special
explanation attached to it. It does not make sense to ask, why some
enterprise should -not- have a subsidy.


How about conspiracy theory?

In a country without a command economy is it easier for government to
control agricultural production with or without paying subsidy?


It was never a secret that cap in the origin, and all along the way
has come with intents to influence agricultural production. The mental
exercise is to realise that government has very little such intent any
more, and far less than it needs to justify the current cap payments.

  #159   Report Post  
Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Michael Saunby
 
Posts: n/a
Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002


"Torsten Brinch" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 20 Dec 2002 21:50:34 +0000, Tim Lamb
wrote:

In article , Torsten Brinch
writes
No, it is the assumed default among reasonable men. It is the
presence, not the absence of a subsidy that must have a special
explanation attached to it. It does not make sense to ask, why some
enterprise should -not- have a subsidy.


How about conspiracy theory?

In a country without a command economy is it easier for government to
control agricultural production with or without paying subsidy?


It was never a secret that cap in the origin, and all along the way
has come with intents to influence agricultural production. The mental
exercise is to realise that government has very little such intent any
more, and far less than it needs to justify the current cap payments.


UK government is a complex beast. Just because parliament, or government
ministers, or the cabinet, or whichever group you believe no longer
supports farming subsidy, wishes to end it immediately, doesn't mean that
the machinery of government will not, one way or another, provide subsidy
for farming for the rest of our lifetimes. It may not be a direct payment
for production (that's not really what happens now anyway), but it will be
some form of support to the food production industries. For example there
are often complaints from environmentalists that some areas are over
grazed, so clearly there will be pressure for government to regulate
grazing, even if government doesn't determine the size of the national
sheep flock through quotas.

It may be that we choose to assist farming in developing countries -
something I was involved in many years ago under a previous government but
which has declined in recent years. We may continue to assist other
friendly nations with beneficial trade agreements, e.g. continue to support
Denmark and New Zealand.

The management of farming, food production, food import and export,
interference with food production and supply in other nations, is something
that provides employment for vast armies of civil servants, from the tax
collectors to scientific research. There's no way this is all going to be
handed over to the private sector.

Certainly more expensive food in the UK might have some interesting effects
on our economy.

Michael Saunby


  #160   Report Post  
Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Jim Webster
 
Posts: n/a
Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002


Michael Saunby wrote in message
...



Certainly more expensive food in the UK might have some interesting

effects
on our economy.


and the minute the euro goes up against the pound this is going to
happen, because more and more of our food is coming in from Europe.


--
Jim Webster

"The pasture of stupidity is unwholesome to mankind"

'Abd-ar-Rahman b. Muhammad b. Khaldun al-Hadrami'



Michael Saunby






  #161   Report Post  
Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Hamish Macbeth
 
Posts: n/a
Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002


"Jim Webster" wrote in message
...

and the minute the euro goes up against the pound this is going to
happen, because more and more of our food is coming in from Europe.

How many economists have moved their bank accounts into the euro.

BTW I understand the European Parliament have decreed that only the French
and Germans may refer to euros,
English speakers must use euro for both singular and plural. Nice to know
thet the English language will be standardised,


  #162   Report Post  
Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Torsten Brinch
 
Posts: n/a
Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002

On Sat, 21 Dec 2002 12:04:42 -0000, "Michael Saunby"
wrote:


"Torsten Brinch" wrote in message
.. .
On Fri, 20 Dec 2002 21:50:34 +0000, Tim Lamb
wrote:
How about conspiracy theory?

In a country without a command economy is it easier for government to
control agricultural production with or without paying subsidy?


It was never a secret that cap in the origin, and all along the way
has come with intents to influence agricultural production. The mental
exercise is to realise that government has very little such intent any
more, and far less than it needs to justify the current cap payments.


UK government is a complex beast. Just because parliament, or government
ministers, or the cabinet, or whichever group you believe no longer
supports farming subsidy, wishes to end it immediately, doesn't mean that
the machinery of government will not, one way or another, provide subsidy
for farming for the rest of our lifetimes. It may not be a direct payment
for production (that's not really what happens now anyway), but it will be
some form of support to the food production industries.


Mental exercises is to keep different aspects of a complex situation
clearly separated, not to deny it.

"Surely the government should help the industry to do its business,
and pay for what the nation requires of the industry through our
environmental and conservation agenda [and] not by subsidising the
industry to produce goods that are not wanted in the market place?"
(Ms Beckett, January 2002)

For example there
are often complaints from environmentalists that some areas are over
grazed, so clearly there will be pressure for government to regulate
grazing, even if government doesn't determine the size of the national
sheep flock through quotas. snip


There is a perilous mix up of two different concepts of overgrazing.
On one hand agricultural production is controlled by the manager's
intent to graze the land most efficiently in his production situation,
on the other hand society may intend land to be grazed less than that
might lead to save a bug or a rare flower.

I am not saying the two intents necessarily must come out in
physically separate enterprises, but mentally they should be kept
separate, since only the latter can be used as justification for
subsidy. To be sure, the public will want to know if they get
countryside value for the money; the environmentalist will measure out
if enough environment comes out of it; and the government will most
certainly not like to be seen as misallocating the resources of
society.

  #163   Report Post  
Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Michael Saunby
 
Posts: n/a
Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002


"Torsten Brinch" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 21 Dec 2002 12:04:42 -0000, "Michael Saunby"
wrote:


"Torsten Brinch" wrote in message
.. .
On Fri, 20 Dec 2002 21:50:34 +0000, Tim Lamb
wrote:
How about conspiracy theory?

In a country without a command economy is it easier for government to
control agricultural production with or without paying subsidy?

It was never a secret that cap in the origin, and all along the way
has come with intents to influence agricultural production. The mental
exercise is to realise that government has very little such intent any
more, and far less than it needs to justify the current cap payments.


UK government is a complex beast. Just because parliament, or

government
ministers, or the cabinet, or whichever group you believe no longer
supports farming subsidy, wishes to end it immediately, doesn't mean

that
the machinery of government will not, one way or another, provide

subsidy
for farming for the rest of our lifetimes. It may not be a direct

payment
for production (that's not really what happens now anyway), but it will

be
some form of support to the food production industries.


Mental exercises is to keep different aspects of a complex situation
clearly separated, not to deny it.

"Surely the government should help the industry to do its business,
and pay for what the nation requires of the industry through our
environmental and conservation agenda [and] not by subsidising the
industry to produce goods that are not wanted in the market place?"
(Ms Beckett, January 2002)


Typical double-speak. "Pay for what the nations requires" when done by
government rather than consumers IS subsidy!


For example there
are often complaints from environmentalists that some areas are over
grazed, so clearly there will be pressure for government to regulate
grazing, even if government doesn't determine the size of the national
sheep flock through quotas. snip


There is a perilous mix up of two different concepts of overgrazing.
On one hand agricultural production is controlled by the manager's
intent to graze the land most efficiently in his production situation,
on the other hand society may intend land to be grazed less than that
might lead to save a bug or a rare flower.


The same problem faces the landlord and the tenant farmer, but they usually
manage to resolve it in time. The problem we have in the UK is the state
claims rights over lands that it doesn't own. If the state owned all
grazing rights, regardless of mineral, sporting, etc. rights then it
wouldn't need to use subsidy, taxes, etc. trouble is that although the
state owns development rights (conversion from farmland to housing, etc.)
it doesn't yet own grazing rights.

I am not saying the two intents necessarily must come out in
physically separate enterprises, but mentally they should be kept
separate, since only the latter can be used as justification for
subsidy.


Why does the needs of society for protected environments for wildlife
justify subsidy but the need for vibrant rural communities does not?
Surely any and all social needs, from state education and free at point of
use health service to affordable nutritious food, can at extreme times
justify some subsidy. I do think it's wrong that we have in recent years
moved to permanent subsidy for health, education, police, etc. but it
doesn't particularly surprise me.

To be sure, the public will want to know if they get
countryside value for the money; the environmentalist will measure out
if enough environment comes out of it; and the government will most
certainly not like to be seen as misallocating the resources of
society.


Michael Saunby


  #165   Report Post  
Old 26-04-2003, 12:27 PM
Torsten Brinch
 
Posts: n/a
Default UK farm profitability to jun 2002

On Sat, 21 Dec 2002 15:02:46 -0000, "Michael Saunby"
wrote:


"Torsten Brinch" wrote in message
.. .


Mental exercises is to keep different aspects of a complex situation
clearly separated, not to deny it.

"Surely the government should help the industry to do its business,
and pay for what the nation requires of the industry through our
environmental and conservation agenda [and] not by subsidising the
industry to produce goods that are not wanted in the market place?"
(Ms Beckett, January 2002)


Typical double-speak. "Pay for what the nations requires" when done by
government rather than consumers IS subsidy!


Keep exercising, you are still missing the point.

 
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