by KaiserJeep » Sun 22 Apr 2018, 17:34:51
Yet in spite of Tanada's reasonable prediction for an energy-constrained tomorrow, the trends today are still in the opposite direction. I did a quick online check and presently about 2.0% of our population (which figure includes both citizens and resident non-citizens) reside on farms. This compares with 2.2% in 1986, just 32 years ago. The suburbs are ever so slightly smaller in population, the cities are where the population has grown significantly.
Corporate farm acreage is up, petroleum fuels consumed in agriculture are also up, overall acreage under cultivation is down, number of family run farms is down. The average US family income spent on food is down from about 19% in 1986 to 9.2% in 2017. That is kinda deceptive because the income brackets changed in size in those years, and the lowest income 20% population spend 33% on food and the highest income 20% spends about 8% in food, but considerably more in absolute dollar amounts. (All are USDA figures from Wikipedia.)
But I'll have to say, the trends don't appear to be doomish at all. More population in unsustainable cities, about the same in unsustainable suburbs, fewer in rural areas, all spending less income on food.
What Doom?
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Warning: Messages timestamped before April 1, 2016, 06:00 PST were posted by the unmodified human KaiserJeep 1.0