Regarding SMC76's post. You said that you didn't think that prices controlled production. My take for a long time is that there are two choices.
1. The producer is paid a fair price for their product which results in surplus production.
2. The hard rules of the market control production to match demand.
I don't think there is any doubt that the second choice is what we have experienced. It may or may not be coincedence that our herd expanded when our $$ was low and now it contracts when the opposite occurs.
I believe in the market. Its force always shows no matter what manipulations exist. For example, the Ukraine was a major wheat exporter until the bolshevics eliminated the kulaks in the '20s. It took 75 years but now it is again a major player in the wheat market. Why? Best product for the price. The market always rewards that.
Do we all have to be low cost producers? Absolutely not. I admire and endorse any number of producers who find premium markets. But I will stick to best product at the best price I can get. HT
1. The producer is paid a fair price for their product which results in surplus production.
2. The hard rules of the market control production to match demand.
I don't think there is any doubt that the second choice is what we have experienced. It may or may not be coincedence that our herd expanded when our $$ was low and now it contracts when the opposite occurs.
I believe in the market. Its force always shows no matter what manipulations exist. For example, the Ukraine was a major wheat exporter until the bolshevics eliminated the kulaks in the '20s. It took 75 years but now it is again a major player in the wheat market. Why? Best product for the price. The market always rewards that.
Do we all have to be low cost producers? Absolutely not. I admire and endorse any number of producers who find premium markets. But I will stick to best product at the best price I can get. HT
Comment