mike777, on 2011-November-26, 14:54, said:
The confusion comes in the definition of your use of the phrase "pay less". I hope this helps.
?In economics, the law of comparative advantage says that two countries (or other kinds of parties, such as individuals or firms thereas) will both gain from trade if, in the absence of trade, they have different relative costs for producing the same goods. Even if one country is more efficient in the production of all goods (absolute advantage) than the other, both countries will still gain by trading with each other, as long as they have different relative efficiencies.[1][2][3]
For example, if, using machinery, a worker in one country can produce both shoes and shirts at 6 per hour, and a worker in a country with less machinery can produce either 2 shoes or 4 shirts in an hour, each country can gain from trade because their internal trade-offs between shoes and shirts are different. The less-efficient country has a comparative advantage in shirts, so it finds it more efficient to produce shirts and trade them to the more-efficient country for shoes. Without trade, its opportunity cost per shoe was 2 shirts; by trading, its cost per shoe can reduce to as low as 1 shirt depending on how much trade occurs (since the more-efficient country has a 1:1 trade-off). The more-efficient country has a comparative advantage in shoes, so it can gain in efficiency by moving some workers from shirt-production to shoe-production and trading some shoes for shirts. Without trade, its cost to make a shirt was 1 shoe; by trading, its cost per shirt can go as low as 1/2 shoe depending on how much trade occurs.
The net benefits to each country are called the gains from trade."
http://en.wikipedia....ative_advantage
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Keep in mind if you are growing and selling a huge amount of apples you need more than apples...you need land, water, stock seed, fertilizer, insect protection, transportation, etc etc....not just apples, you need to look at all of your costs and add them all up....
The point being all of the above may be put to better comparitive use, more productive use, growing something else than apples. As a farmer I assume you want to maximize your long term profit for all the hard work you put in. Growing apples may not be the most productive use of your land, time and skill set.
You know what? To me this is smoke and mirrors.
If you want to get into a discussion of what things should be grown where then you are getting into a very dicey area indeed. I don't know much about economics but I DO know quite a bit about growing food.
You might be interested in the Melbourne Peace Prize acceptance speech by Dr Vandana Shiva as to where your sort of thinking ended up getting farmers in India who were convinced that they would be better off listening to that sort of stuff. At least the farmers who didn't join the hundreds who comitted suicide when they couldn't sustain the farms doing what they had been convinced to do instead of what they had been doing.
You might read One Straw revolution by Fukuoka who watched as people abandoned their traditional crops in favor of what they were promised would be more profitable for them, and their subsequent struggles.
You might want to consider the Dust Bowl of the 30s which largely was a result of people farming the way business people (banks)told them to so they could make lots of money. The banks ended up with lots of farms out of that one.
And as far as that goes, you are wrong as far as needing fertilizers and pesticides etc; learn something about permaculture. I will point you in one direction..check out Joel Salatin of Polyface Farms. He was written about in Michael Pollan's book The Omnivore's Dilemma. He will not send anything further than 400 miles from farm to consumer and he is very successful no matter what terms you choose to use to define success. Or watch some of the videos on You Tube about Sepp Holtzer of Austria.
You could look up some of the projects being done by Geoff Lawton with desert being brought back to fertility without chemicals. Or Growing Power in the US founded and run by Will Allen. He claims something like a million pounds of food grown on 3 acres. Without chemical fertilizers or pesticides.
Of course, before the companies such as Monsanto managed to get patents on seed, farmers used to save a portion of their harvest to use as seed the following year; this has become illegal in many instances. Farmers have lost their farms for having such plants show up on their land even though the plants are proven to escape from planted fields and show up where they haven't been planted. So seed can be a cost.
Pesticides and fetilizers are most certainly required by such seeds, although both are becoming less effective.One of the costs not usually considered is the cost to the environment of using such things; in terms of the pollution of waterways from runoff in paticular.
Pesticides are now starting to give rise to superbugs in the same way that overuse of antibiotics has. You can check the growing concern about the corn borer in the States.
I am told that in the European Union it is now ILLEGAL to sell any seeds not on an approved list, most of which consists of seeds which must be bought each year. Freedom is a wonderful thing when it becomes illegal to sell celery and bean seeds unless they have officially been approved.
The other thing not mentioned is time. Some people claim that people in the first world countries are now working much harder and longer hours than was generally the case 80 or 100 years ago. that is..if they are working at all I suppose.
Fukuoka grew barley, rice and citrus trees and he had no machinery, no chemicals. He and the stores which carried his product could have got a premium for his produce but he refused to allow that, going so far as to boycott one store which he caught doing so. He also had the resources and free time to observe, to think, to teach, to write, to travel.
He had no debt. Very very few farmers could say that today.