WD9, Vader;
I see this on DTN:
"As a niche becomes commoditized, the small producer who sought refuge in the niche must do one of two things: Either get big himself, or abandon the niche and find a new one. Either way, the producer is on a treadmill, says Michael Boehlje, an ag economist at Purdue University.
"In commodity production, it's the technology treadmill. You have to adopt more efficient technology to be a low-cost producer and the risk is choosing the right technology," Boehlje says. "In differentiated production, you have a second treadmill. You have to continually look to new differentiated products or attributes because over time, those differentiated attributes become commoditized."
Now Vader, what do you expect to happen if a artificial hold back of a product keeps the market higher than if all the commodity was avaliable?
SOme One else will grow more.
Or does the CWB believe the HRS and Durum markets are not commodities yet?
What do you think WD9?
I see this on DTN:
"As a niche becomes commoditized, the small producer who sought refuge in the niche must do one of two things: Either get big himself, or abandon the niche and find a new one. Either way, the producer is on a treadmill, says Michael Boehlje, an ag economist at Purdue University.
"In commodity production, it's the technology treadmill. You have to adopt more efficient technology to be a low-cost producer and the risk is choosing the right technology," Boehlje says. "In differentiated production, you have a second treadmill. You have to continually look to new differentiated products or attributes because over time, those differentiated attributes become commoditized."
Now Vader, what do you expect to happen if a artificial hold back of a product keeps the market higher than if all the commodity was avaliable?
SOme One else will grow more.
Or does the CWB believe the HRS and Durum markets are not commodities yet?
What do you think WD9?
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