Recession-Free "Safe" Zone In Midwest Is Shrinking

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Recession-Free "Safe" Zone In Midwest Is Shrinking stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

BEN NEARY and MIKE SCHNEIDER | 08/ 1/09 06:17 PM | AP

What's Your Reaction?
In this photo made Thursday, June 25, 2009, Carl Rupp poses next to a tractor on his form south of Torrington, Wyo. (AP Photo/Ben Neary)

TORRINGTON, Wyo. — Carl Rupp and his neighbors follow the old rancher's creed: "Keep your money in your pocket."

Rupp has farmed his whole life. He lives in Goshen County, a rural spot along the Nebraska line where cattle outnumber humans 16 to 1 and you can still see the ruts cut by wagons that hauled pioneers along the Oregon Trail. "We're very conservative," said Rupp, 62. "We don't go out too far on a limb."

That prudent financial bent, matched with the high prices paid for crops and energy in the past few years, has largely protected Goshen County and a core group of several hundred other counties in 10 states from the recession's chokehold. The Associated Press Economic Stress Index shows they make up a "safe zone" that covers a long swath of middle America, from the Great Plains south to Texas.

But the safe zone is shrinking. Energy production and prices are sliding, especially for coal and natural gas. Crop prices are dropping, too, as there's less demand in Asia for American wheat, corn and soybeans. There were 800 counties in the safe zone a year ago, a number that dropped to about 300 counties in May and slid further to 200 counties in June.

"To say that you're doing pretty well is just to say that it's the best-looking puppy in a pretty ugly litter," said Wyoming Gov. Dave Freudenthal, who recently imposed a 10 percent budget cut across his state's government in response to falling tax revenue from the energy sector.

The contiguous counties in the safe zone start in Montana and North Dakota, and cascade into Wyoming, South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas and Oklahoma, and end in northern Texas and eastern New Mexico. Those in the safe zone had an AP Economic Stress score under 5 in June, making them the economically healthiest in the United States.

The AP calculates a score from 1 to 100 based on each county's unemployment, foreclosure and bankruptcy rates. The higher the score, the higher the economic stress.

The safe zone is largely rural – all but a dozen of the counties have populations of less than 25,000 people, many of whom make a living in agriculture. As the rest of the nation was riding the mortgage bubble, many farmers and ranchers in the safe zone who suffered through the agriculture crisis of the 1980s took on comparatively little debt. And when the recession hit, it didn't dampen demand for the row crops grown on the Great Plains.

Story continues below
advertisement

Consumption of food and feed grains has increased 3 to 4 percent annually in recent years, while a federal mandate that gasoline contain certain levels of ethanol has also kept demand for corn and soybeans high.

"The last few years, ag has been pretty good," said Rupp, who sells alfalfa to dairies and feedlots. "In the long run, if there is such a thing, it's more stable than being in a county with energy as a primary industry. We miss out on the booms and busts, but overall we're in pretty good shape."

But while not in a bust cycle, ag prices are still down enough from last summer's highs to worry Doug Goehring, North Dakota's agriculture commissioner.

"If you really want to hurt the economy, beat the heck out of agriculture," Goehring said. "It is a primary sector in our economy. It is generating new wealth. You can't just rely on services to drive your economy."

Elsewhere in the safe zone, the business is energy, and the recession is starting to take a toll on a business that was booming. While oil prices have increased this summer, it's the price of natural gas and coal that matters most here. Natural gas that traded for nearly $13 per 1,000 cubic feet last summer is now available for less than $4. The spot price for coal is running around $9 a ton, down from about $13 last year.

The number of rigs in Wyoming drilling for coal bed methane dropped to zero in May, down from 19 the previous year, while the number of conventional rigs drilling for natural gas and oil is off by more than half. No coal mines have closed, but annual production could drop as much as 10 percent as the recession stalls the need for electricity nationwide.

"The prices of coal are down. Production is going to be down," said Marion Loomis, executive director of the Wyoming Mining Association. "So we're going to see a pretty significant reduction probably this year, and it's really just based on the amount of electricity that the country is using."

When booming, energy extraction kept unemployment low. In Oklahoma, for example, unemployment began creeping upward not long after as energy prices began sliding in September. It stood at 6.3 percent in June, up from 3.8 percent in June 2008. Wyoming's unemployment rate was 5.9 percent in June – far below the national average of 9.5 percent, but the highest in the state since June 1999.

Because of a 45-percent dip in demand for its drilling services and installing pipeline, Three Way Inc. of Buffalo, Wyo. has laid off 145 workers, about 60 percent of its work force from last summer. It was among a dozen companies in northeastern Wyoming's coal-rich Powder River Basin that recently auctioned off hundreds of trucks, trailers and other equipment, said company controller Alex Mantle.

"Definitely people see some doom and gloom and are certainly disappointed," Mantle said.

Because of their small size, the AP index lacks foreclosure data for about half of the 200 counties that made up the safe zone in June; those with a population under 25,000 were assigned a foreclosure rate of zero. But there is widespread anecdotal evidence that real estate is an anchor in a place where many families proudly trace their land titles to homesteading ancestors who settled the frontier in the 1800s.

Aided by low interest rates, the value of farm and ranch land has grown by double digits this decade. Unlike California or Florida, there was no largely speculative housing bubble here.

Mike Daly started First State Bank of Wheatland in 1981, first setting up shop in a mobile home in a southeastern Wyoming town surrounded by lush farmland. His bank, which now has several branches, never got into the subprime mortgage market, and he said his customers prefer the traditional fixed-rate, 30-year home loans.

"The vast majority of our borrowers have had a pretty good run. And by that, I'm going to say eight to nine years of really (ag) good prices," Daly said. "They've increased their equity positions, they've paid down debt, and they're in a position, for the most part, to weather the storm."

___

Associated Press writers Dale Wetzel in Bismarck, N.D., and Murray Evans in Oklahoma City contributed to this report.

TORRINGTON, Wyo. — Carl Rupp and his neighbors follow the old rancher's creed: "Keep your money in your pocket." Rupp has farmed his whole life. He lives in Goshen County, a rural spot along th...
TORRINGTON, Wyo. — Carl Rupp and his neighbors follow the old rancher's creed: "Keep your money in your pocket." Rupp has farmed his whole life. He lives in Goshen County, a rural spot along th...
Loading...
 
Report Corrections
 
Comments
201
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 Next › Last » (3 pages total)
- iskra I'm a Fan of iskra 172 fans permalink
photo

I find it amusing that the right wing uses the word Socialism to scare us off health care yet most of their Red states couldn't exist without massive subsidies.

Why is it that these states are always moaning about taxes when they are the net benificiaries? So much for all this talk of Mavericky inidependence.

Looking at Federal spending Wyoming gets $1.11 for every dollar of tax contributed.
http://www.taxfoundation.org/research/show/266.html

Sounds like welfare to me. Or is it socialism?

The real scary part is that the people in these states do really believe that they are all self sufficient and have the attitude that the blue states can go rot. What I think they ought to start thinking about is that as tax revenue falls in the blue states it's only a matter of time before they see the flow of largess dry up.

Without the 'bridges to nowhere' , farm subsidies and other Federal dollars coming in some of these states are set to see 30's style depression.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 PM on 08/04/2009
- Lilith33 I'm a Fan of Lilith33 163 fans permalink

Just wait till the california teet runs dry.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:48 PM on 08/03/2009
- iskra I'm a Fan of iskra 172 fans permalink
photo

Exactly. Add IL and NY to CA and you have a big chunk of the nations GDP.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:54 PM on 08/04/2009
- Aaror I'm a Fan of Aaror 44 fans permalink

How odd...
The part of the nation which has always lagged behind the rest of the nation in trends, whether fashion or financial, has lagged behind the nation in the current trend (recession), but is starting to experience what the coasts did last year.
Oh wait, calling it the safe zone instead of realizing it was the usual lag made some folks feel safer or superior.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 PM on 08/03/2009
photo

i'm sure Government Subsidies had nothing to do with it. Real "conservative."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:16 PM on 08/03/2009
- laminators I'm a Fan of laminators 2 fans permalink

So now, does anyone still think the recession is over? http://www.governmentalityblog.com/my_weblog/question-of-the-day-8309.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:41 AM on 08/03/2009
- Gripen I'm a Fan of Gripen 14 fans permalink
photo

No way and it isnt a recession it is a depression

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 PM on 08/03/2009
photo

I'm sure people who actually survived the Depression would beg to differ. Regardless, anyone with half a brain knows it ain't over. Things just don't happen that fast in the real world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:18 PM on 08/03/2009

google "farm subsidies" and find the database that lists all the subsidies paid to farm (corps) over the nation. A lot of subsidizing going on

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 AM on 08/03/2009
photo

While you are googling, are you near starvation?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 PM on 08/03/2009

now google high fructose corn syrup and obesity and Chuck Grassley + healthcare

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 PM on 08/03/2009
- Gripen I'm a Fan of Gripen 14 fans permalink
photo

Yes USA agroculturar policies would be the wetdream of soviet and communists.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 08/03/2009
- Aaror I'm a Fan of Aaror 44 fans permalink

Google New Zealand's experience with ending farm subsidies. A lot of speculators lost millions, giant factory farms went bust, and thousands of locals took up farming. Horrible all around (if you are a capitalist).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 PM on 08/03/2009
photo

The Cato Institute and the National Center for Policy Analysis are propaganda entities for free-market economics, and they both have a long history of lying and distorting to promote free-market ideas.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:34 PM on 08/03/2009
- Solja I'm a Fan of Solja 116 fans permalink
photo

All farms are not "corps". Many, many, many of them are family-owned, small businesses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 PM on 08/03/2009
- RJII I'm a Fan of RJII 78 fans permalink
photo

the Farm bill is maybe the biggest form of welfare in America, but they call it a subsidy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:21 PM on 08/02/2009
- Glocksf21 I'm a Fan of Glocksf21 20 fans permalink
photo

welfar is part of the farm bill, thats why food stamps have dept of agriculture printed on them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:23 PM on 08/03/2009
- Maury inSD I'm a Fan of Maury inSD 2 fans permalink

I fear the family farming operations are slowly/steadily shrinking...how can they compete with this?
This was written 11/1999
Please read from: http://www.counterpunch.org/food.html
How Three Firms Came to Rule the World

If the press, which rarely mentions agricultural issues anymore, doesn't take this turn of events seriously, the corporate leaders of the agri-conglomerates certainly do. And they are not the least bit bashful about what's at stake. Dwayne Andreas is the politically wired former CEO of Archer Daniels Midland. He recently boasted to Reuters that he wanted to make ADM the world's dominant agriculture firm because, to his way of thinking, there's simply nothing more powerful than controlling the world's food supply. He said agribusiness is more powerful than the oil industry.

"The food business is far and away the most important business in the world," Andreas said. "Everything else is a luxury. Food is what you need to sustain life every day. Food is fuel. You can't run a tractor without fuel and you can't run a human being without it either. Food is the absolute beginning."

There is NO way to get away from the monopolistic corporations.
Is that not troublesome? Scary?.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:09 PM on 08/02/2009
photo

People talk about real wealth. The only real wealth is the capacity to produce food.

As for subsidies, if there were no subsidies, ag would be a rocky road. if ag is a rocky road, then the aisles in your grocery store would eventually become a rocky road, and none of you has ever had anything but smooth sailin' in a grocery store.

The major criticism of ag subsidies comes from free-market advocates. Imagine if the aisles of your grocery store were as screwed up as the financial system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:31 PM on 08/02/2009
photo

No...sorry, Ag would NOT be a rocky road.
Know what would be a rocky road?
The limitless supply of high fructose corn syrup, that's what.
Nothing else.
Food is essential.
TRUST ME...someone would figure out a way to grow it without the subsidies and people would figure out a way to buy it, and eat it.
WITHOUT SUBSIDIES.
Time to stop gobbling up everything you're told without questioning it.
Time to grow up and start thinking for yourself.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 PM on 08/02/2009
- Lorianne I'm a Fan of Lorianne 63 fans permalink
photo

You've got it mixed up.
Big agri-business is who benefits the most from farm subsidies.

And the majority of so-called 'food' in our grocery stores we could without. In face, we'd be healthier without it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 08/02/2009
photo

"Nothing more powerful than controlling the world's food supply".
That's some mighty ballsy boasting.
Nice to know that there's a limitless supply of big CEO's who feel so confident in their intent to control the world that they can come right out and say it without the least bit of reservation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:40 PM on 08/02/2009
photo

See the movie Food, Inc.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:31 AM on 08/03/2009
- Maury inSD I'm a Fan of Maury inSD 2 fans permalink

Also see the documentary The Future of Food. I watched it on either Free Speech TV (FSTV) or LINK TV
Here's a synopsis of film http://www.thefutureoffood.com/synopsis.htm

Other interesting tidbits regarding Monsanto:

PUBPAT(Public Patent Foundation) CHALLENGES MONSANTO PATENTS BEING USED TO BANKRUPT AMERICAN FARMERS: Patent Office Asked to Review and Revoke Agricultural Giant's Widely Asserted Patents
http://www.pubpat.org/monsantofiled.htm

Tell Monsanto What You Think of Their Patent for Their Latest Invention: The Pig
Aug. 3, 2005
http://www.organicconsumers.org/monsanto/pigpatent080305.cfm

http://www.no-patents-on-seeds.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=68&Itemid=42

Our current/future health is at stake with all this big business, there's so much going on there and the majority of us are not aware, but that's the way they like it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 08/03/2009
- FatJoe I'm a Fan of FatJoe 2 fans permalink

I would've liked to see a discussion of how much of that "safe zone" is also supported by ag subsidies, in addition to market forces.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 PM on 08/02/2009
photo

One of those subsidies was probably for ethanol in which the process of converting mass (corn) into fuel is a high energy consuming process.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 08/02/2009
photo

Why do we still have FARM AID if AG is doing so well?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:40 PM on 08/02/2009

"The contiguous counties in the safe zone start in Montana and North Dakota, and cascade into Wyoming, South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas and Oklahoma, and end in northern Texas and eastern New Mexico."

Iowa is the only state usually designated as a "Midwestern" state.

North Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, and Oklahoma are Plains states. Montana and Wyoming are Mountain states, and Texas and New Mexico are in the Southwest (or also South in the case of Texas).

Are you going to disappear this comment as well?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 AM on 08/02/2009

I too thought that the authors stretched the adjective "Midwestern" by including states such as NM, TX, and WY. However, I always thought of the Dakotas and KS as "Midwestern".

Of course, some states can be regarded as fitting into more than one region (e.g., like the way that MD is considered Southern by some peoole and considered Mid-Atlantic by others). One interesting example, IMHO, is MO (which some see as Midwestern and others see as Southern).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:44 PM on 08/02/2009
- Maury inSD I'm a Fan of Maury inSD 2 fans permalink

North Dakota and South Dakota are commonly referred to as the northern plains states.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:38 PM on 08/02/2009
photo

Depends which part of Maryland.
Some parts of it ARE distinctly "southern" in every way, AND it IS South of the Mason-Dixon Line.
That said, some parts of it are much more like the Northeast...it is basically "three states".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:50 PM on 08/02/2009

I wonder how much the farm subsidies that pour into this region from the US govt plays into these calculations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:10 AM on 08/02/2009
- desertman I'm a Fan of desertman 16 fans permalink

Maybe some. But, in a depression being at the source of the food chain can be a good thing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 AM on 08/02/2009
photo

Being at the source of the food chain in a depression the likes of which you describe would mean that the farm has been foreclosed on a long time ago and you're already growing your own food, so being a farmer in a depression that bad doesn't mean you're going to have easier access, just more knowledge.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 PM on 08/02/2009
- Softnsweet I'm a Fan of Softnsweet 9 fans permalink
photo

I agree

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 AM on 08/02/2009
photo

But Skott is making a valid point.
How "conservative" can a person be who depends on government AG subsidies?
Basically this is a bunch of farmers who LOVE their "socialized" agriculture, but they would deny being "socialists".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 PM on 08/02/2009
- TJCole I'm a Fan of TJCole 166 fans permalink
photo

We should be Growing Industrial Hemp for Fuel...!

It would do so much for our economy and America's Farms...

It would create many many Green Jobs, we can get Cellulose Ethanol from it and Bio Diesel from it's seeds...

It would also enhance our national security and energy Independence...!

It is not a drug that gets you high at all...

http://hemp4fuel.com/

Hemp 4 Fuel see the Why Hemp section especially...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 AM on 08/02/2009
- MajorKong I'm a Fan of MajorKong 404 fans permalink
photo

The government paid farmers to grow hemp during World War 2.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 PM on 08/02/2009
photo

Paying farmers to grow something is socialism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 PM on 08/02/2009
- 957 I'm a Fan of 957 15 fans permalink

Sorry but I would challenge the accuracy of this story in southwestern minnesota the farmers down there are experiencing record crops and are expecting a very very good year, feed stores doing well, tractor sales are good etc. you go down there and there is no talk about recession, its about rain and the expected record harvest, and believe me none around here are feeling any sort of recession, sure there are exceptions but that not the rule, besides nebraska/wyoming are not considered the mid-west.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 AM on 08/02/2009
- Kassandra I'm a Fan of Kassandra 107 fans permalink
photo

That don't mean there's gonna be any $$$ to buy those crops, sir.
My Granpappy had a farm in upper central MN during the Depression. He had to get rid of all his cattle as it cost him more to ship them to market than they brought from their sale.
His family ( my mother's) was considered "rich" because they could grow their own food and weren't starving like so many others, even in rural MN.

My family farm was stolen in the great farm buy up of the 70's when we were in another wonderful recession. It's pretty much big AGRA now and they do what they want with the land. A farmer's life is haaaaard and so dependent on weather.
Now that we've got climate change bearing down on US and the rest of the world, the greedmiesters all saw this coming and are grabbing everything they can, including the last family farms.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 08/02/2009
- desertman I'm a Fan of desertman 16 fans permalink

Doesn't mean they will make money.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 AM on 08/02/2009
- desertman I'm a Fan of desertman 16 fans permalink

no. it means the go through a lot of money. Whether they make a profit is another matter.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:52 AM on 08/02/2009
- getoffmedz I'm a Fan of getoffmedz 111 fans permalink
photo

No place in America that is safe from the Great Bush/Cheney Depression.

Things will really start to get bad late this fall - companies will continue to fold, lay-offs will continue, maxed-out plastic, financial support stops, aggressive banks and tempers in families wear thin. Toss in the Swine Flu Pandemic and a stock market crash - well, here's a tip. Invest in companies who manufacture double-wides.

Question: How long does it take to bring down the greatest country on Earth?

Answer: Eight years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:31 AM on 08/02/2009
- wpiv926 I'm a Fan of wpiv926 24 fans permalink

You got that right. The republicans will not be happy until the see the final manifestations of the disasterous last 8 years: Complete ruination!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 AM on 08/02/2009
photo

Exactly, and then they'll spin it and blame it all on Obama while their memory-deficiant constituancy will eat it up with a plastic, non-biodegradable spoon. Cause and effect has no meaning to these people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 PM on 08/03/2009
- Matrsnot I'm a Fan of Matrsnot 28 fans permalink

The recession began when a democratic congress forced Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to give subprime loans to people who could not afford to pay the money back for their homes. And yes Bush was in on it too as he signed it. It has taken a mere 7 months for our "leader" to destroy the coal and shale industry and he is still working on total bankruptcy for them as promised. It will take a bit longer to destroy the entire economy, but he will probably succeed in that too with the Cap and Con and "Healthcare reform." Many of us in the midwest were better off under the previous regime than we are now. Rising prices across the board since the new administration took over are the real problem. Personally, I am feeling little, if any heat from this "depression." Take notice that unemployment is very high right now and will remain so until there are some checks and balances in the governmental system. Someone needs to put a check on the spending this congress in inflicting on us with the big government, big brother concepts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 08/02/2009
- Softnsweet I'm a Fan of Softnsweet 9 fans permalink
photo

You need to do more research Snot!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:47 AM on 08/02/2009

I am relatively sure that will be happening in 2010.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:48 PM on 08/02/2009
photo

shouldn't you have prefaced this comment with, "Rush says . . . .?"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 PM on 08/03/2009
- iskra I'm a Fan of iskra 172 fans permalink
photo

Right....Fannie and Freddie were the cause of AIG, Lehman, Citi and Goldman all going bust.

Why not blame it on Acorn?

While Fannie and Freddy did indeed give out loans to sub prime they were hardly the only culprits and not even the lion's share of the loans. . the top 25 subprime lenders were the usual suspects ... our bailout friends .
http://www.publicintegrity.org/investigations/economic_meltdown/articles/entry/1286/

How the democrats managed to convince Country Wide to make so many loans or how they convinces Goldman to repackage those assets I would love to see you explain.

Truth is we're all guilty in this one. Dems, Independents and Repubs. Regulation was relaxed and encouraged by both parties. We all loved our properties going up in value.

Trying to pin this on Obama's first 7 months is not just ridiculous, it pretends that the problem happened in just the last year. This tsunami has been in the making for quite some time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:51 PM on 08/04/2009
- desertman I'm a Fan of desertman 16 fans permalink

Last I checked it is still here and gaining momentum so will need to be named:

Great Bush/Cheney/Obama/Biden depression

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:47 AM on 08/02/2009
- mitsie I'm a Fan of mitsie 65 fans permalink
photo

Sorry, I have to make another pot of coffee. I ment to say the Chinese will take over our farms. LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 AM on 08/02/2009
- desertman I'm a Fan of desertman 16 fans permalink

how would that work?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 AM on 08/02/2009
- aweissnet I'm a Fan of aweissnet 26 fans permalink
photo

They can buy them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 PM on 08/02/2009
- mitsie I'm a Fan of mitsie 65 fans permalink
photo

I grew up on a farm. Now I am disgusted that the foreign govts, are buying up most of our farms and incorporating them into a large business. There are very few smaller farms that can survive. It's sad but many more of the farms will be bought up in the future. The only way some of these farms exist is for being paid by the govt. not to plant crops. Sometimes people have to be creative to try to survive, but they should not depend on subsidies, because eventually those will run out. Sometimes people have to accept the fact that our farm goods will be supplied by the Chapenese and other govts. I have no idea how this problem can be reversed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 AM on 08/02/2009
Page: 1 2 3 Next › Last » (3 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect