by patience » Mon 14 Jan 2008, 13:19:56
Welcome back, Mr. Bill! Yes, it does take the market time to work properly, and unfortunately, our govt. policies are too often wrong headed, and virtually always politically motivated rather than for the common good. What I've heard says Canada is doing a better job with that, than the US.
The time lag of markets is what concerns me about farmers at the moment. Another thread here tells of a pinch of high fertilizer prices. Farmers are all to often undercapitalized, and at the mercy of speculative prices. My definition: Farming (noun)-The only business that buys everything retail, and sells everything wholesale. Markets have successfully applied the divide and conquer rule here, leaving individual farmers in the weakest of bargaining positions.
True, those who bought land overpriced need to be weeded out. I agree with all your policy ideas generally. Currently, the past many years of inflation have, however, put most farms and businesses in a bad debt position, which may soon have to be serviced with deflated currencies, or, more likely, have their needed operating lines of credit cut off or called in as banking weathers its' own storms. In the past, we've seen price and cost whipsaw situations, and the looming credit debacle could be the worst of all.
I agree that commodity prices will probably hold up, but input costs could soar to untenable levels. Farm profit margins, especially those operating on credit are very vulnerable here. I expect that only the strongest will survive in farming, if the financial worst comes to pass. Like you said, the poorly managed will fail and deserve it. My concerns are for those in the middle ground, who bought into a business model that had worked for a long time, right up until all of a sudden, it doesn't anymore.