Wonder if Sprott knows about this blog?
I am not aware of a single example of a successful, large-scale investor-owned farm this side of the Napa Valley. Many U.S. states outlaw it. We know how the communist farming collectives worked out and what happened to the Matador Co-op Farm. This is like junk fax. If it worked everybody would be doing it. The only people who seem to be making large-scale farming work while involving a lot of people are the Hutterites and they have a slightly different business model. Farming is the ultimate individual enterprise. There is nothing else like it. All over the world farming is progressive and profitable in proportion to the freedom that farmers have to pursue their individual self interest.
We see investors buying farm land with both hands but sitting on it while the price goes up is hardly the same as working it.
Investors and investment funds do not have the tolerance for setbacks that private individual farmers must. If you have a drought or flood or frost or the market collapses you tighten your belt, take less out (or nothing) and wait for next year, or the year after that. An investor would sell out and buy gold or oil or fertilizer shares.
The sparkplug here is the Indian angle. It is very fashionable to make so-called partners out of the First Nations. A booming industry of consultants, educators, helpers, managers has developed, scooping up the money that comes from Ottawa and through the reserves. The aboriginal people are making progress in spite of everything the white man is doing to help them. Let's see how they make out with Sprott.
I am not aware of a single example of a successful, large-scale investor-owned farm this side of the Napa Valley. Many U.S. states outlaw it. We know how the communist farming collectives worked out and what happened to the Matador Co-op Farm. This is like junk fax. If it worked everybody would be doing it. The only people who seem to be making large-scale farming work while involving a lot of people are the Hutterites and they have a slightly different business model. Farming is the ultimate individual enterprise. There is nothing else like it. All over the world farming is progressive and profitable in proportion to the freedom that farmers have to pursue their individual self interest.
We see investors buying farm land with both hands but sitting on it while the price goes up is hardly the same as working it.
Investors and investment funds do not have the tolerance for setbacks that private individual farmers must. If you have a drought or flood or frost or the market collapses you tighten your belt, take less out (or nothing) and wait for next year, or the year after that. An investor would sell out and buy gold or oil or fertilizer shares.
The sparkplug here is the Indian angle. It is very fashionable to make so-called partners out of the First Nations. A booming industry of consultants, educators, helpers, managers has developed, scooping up the money that comes from Ottawa and through the reserves. The aboriginal people are making progress in spite of everything the white man is doing to help them. Let's see how they make out with Sprott.
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