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To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (247148)4/24/2008 5:55:14 AM
From: Tom Clarke  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793917
 
Ethanol Policy: Economics and Ethics

The Washington Times reports:

Farmers and food executives appealed fruitlessly to federal officials yesterday for regulatory steps to limit speculative buying that is helping to drive food prices higher. Meanwhile, some Americans are stocking up on staples such as rice, flour and oil in anticipation of high prices and shortages spreading from overseas.

A Bay Area TV station reports:

The price of rice has increased dramatically in recent weeks due to crop failure overseas and resulting hoarding, NBC11 reported.

And at least one Bay Area store is asking customers to hold back on their rice purchases. Costco has posted signs asking customers to follow their regular rice-buying habits.

The rice price increase is a result of a domino effect, NBC11’s Noelle Walker reported. Drought in Australia led to a severe decline in rice production that in turn led the world’s largest rice exporters to restrict exports. That spurred higher rice prices and hoarding in Asian countries, NBC11 reported.


The rice problem is compounded by the shift in corn (maize) production from food to ethanol as part of the bio-fuel craze. In turn, as maize prices rise, farmers have shifted production from other staple grains such as wheat to corn.

I do not see this as some Malthusian crisis portending the end of the world. In short order, markets will adjust. The rising prices of food will incentivize farmers to put more land in the production and to make greater use of a higher yield crop strains. There will probably also be a shift towards greater use of genetically modified grains that have higher yields and longer shelf lives.

It’s always important to remember in these sort of situations that we have heard predictions of doom and gloom in the past—probably even before Malthus himself—and the combination of technology and basic economics has always provided a solution. There is no reason to think the present food price inflation will prove any different.

Having said that, however, it is important to note that government policies significantly distort the ability of markets to handle these sort of situations. In particular, Iowa’s place as first presidential caucus state and the resulting distortion in US ethanol policy bears much of the blame for present problems. A November 2007 paper from the American Economics Institute, The Benefits and Costs of Ethanol, reports that:

Ethanol production in the United States has been steadily growing and is expected to continue growing. Many politicians see increased ethanol use as a way to promote environmental goals, such as reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and energy security goals. This paper provides the first thorough benefit-cost analysis of increasing ethanol use beyond four billion gallons a year, and finds that the costs of increased production are likely to exceed the benefits by about three billion dollars annually. It also suggests that earlier attempts aimed at promoting ethanol would have likely failed a benefit-cost test, and that Congress should consider repealing the ethanol tariff and tax credit.

The massive increase in the amount of corn being diverted into ethanol production is almost entirely a product government policy rather than market forces. In turn, government policy has been driven by interest group politics. Corn farmers, large agricultural businesses, and a subset of the environmental movement have combined into an unholy alliance that few politicians are willing to buck.

The importance of ethanol to the Iowa economy is well documented, as is the impact of Iowa’s first place in the presidential nomination process. In this election cycle alone, both John McCain and Hillary Clinton flip-flopped their positions on ethanol in order to cater to Iowa farmers.

It has long been clear that ethanol is at best a mixed bag for the environment. Production and use of ethanol is linked to emissions of nitrogen oxides, sulfur oxides, and other volatile organic chemicals. The use of fertilizers and herbicides results in contamination of groundwater and, via runoff, contamination of rivers and lakes. Ethanol production and transportation also consumes enormous amounts of gasoline, electricity, natural gas, and water.

Not only do we subsidize domestic priduction of ethanol, American tarriff policy keeps out cheaper Brazillian ethanol produced from sugar cane, which prompts a good question:

What sense does it make to have a surplus of environmentally-friendly Brazilian sugar-based ethanol with a yield eight times higher than U.S. corn ethanol and zero impact on food prices being kept from an American market by a tariff of 54 cents on a gallon while Iowan corn ethanol gets a subsidy?

It only makes sense if you’re a corn farmer or an ADM executive.

At least in the short term, we can now add starvation to the cost side of the ethanol equation:

According to the UN Food and Agricultural Organisation, the price of wheat is more than 80 per cent higher than a year ago and corn (maize) prices are up by a quarter. Prices for vegetable oils are increasing at similar rates. The organisation also reported that the food price index, based on export prices for 60 internationally-traded foodstuffs, climbed 37 per cent last year, on top of a 14 per cent increase in 2006, and the trend has accelerated this winter.

The effects of this are already visible. Earlier this year protests erupted in Pakistan over wheat shortages and in Indonesia over soybean shortages. Egypt has banned rice exports to keep food at home and China has put price controls on cooking oil, grain, meat, milk and eggs. Food riots have occurred over the last few months in Guinea, Mauritania, Mexico, Uzbekistan, Senegal and Yemen. ...

Population growth and economic progress are part of the problem. Consumption of high-quality foods – mainly in China and India – has boosted demand for grain for animal feed. Add in poor harvests due to bad weather in places such as the US and high energy prices, and it is not surprising that prices are soaring. But the most important reason for the price shock is the rich world’s subsidised appetite for biofuels. Short-sighted policies are causing crops to be diverted to environmentally-dubious biofuels and, as usual, the burden is falling disproportionately on the poor.


The US government policy on subsidizing ethanol is bad economics, bad for the environment, and bad for hungry people everywhere. If biofuels are to be part of American energy policy, economics, environmental concerns, and ethics, all argue for the use of non-food sources (such as switch grass) farmed on land too marginal for use for food production.

stephenbainbridge.com



To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (247148)4/24/2008 6:12:47 AM
From: Nadine Carroll  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 793917
 
Dennis Prager mentioned this Maureen Dowd column on the air yesterday, noting this was one heckuva column from a liberal Hillary-hater who is a big Obama supporter.

Obama pleads "why can't I just eat my waffle?" when asked about Jimmy Carter and Hamas, sounding "bitter" and yet she demands that Hillary leave the race for the good of all? Why shouldn't the one who is wilting over waffles be the one to leave? Why should a woman who just won one of the biggest states in the union by 10 points be asked to leave?

Wilting Over Waffles

By MAUREEN DOWD
Published: April 23, 2008

He’s never going to shake her off.

Not all by himself.

The very fact that he can’t shake her off has become her best argument against him. “Why can’t he close the deal?” Hillary taunted at a polling place on Tuesday.

She’s been running ads about it, suggesting he doesn’t have “what it takes” to run the country. Her message is unapologetically emasculating: If he does not have the gumption to put me in my place, when superdelegates are deserting me, money is drying up, he’s outspending me 2-to-1 on TV ads, my husband’s going crackers and party leaders are sick of me, how can he be trusted to totally obliterate Iran and stop Osama?

Now that Hillary has won Pennsylvania, it will take a village to help Obama escape from the suffocating embrace of his rival. Certainly Howard Dean will be of no use steering her to the exit. It’s like Micronesia telling Russia to denuke.

“You know, some people counted me out and said to drop out,” said a glowing Hillary at her Philadelphia victory party, with Bill and Chelsea by her side. “Well, the American people don’t quit. And they deserve a president who doesn’t quit, either.”

The Democrats are growing ever more desperate about the Attack of the 50 Foot Woman. With gas prices out of control, with the comically oblivious President Bush shimmying around New Orleans — the city he let drown — and Condi sneaking into Baghdad as rockets and mortars hail down on the Green Zone, beating the Republicans should be a cinch.

But the Democrats watch in horror as Hillary continues to scratch up the once silvery sheen on Obama, and as John McCain not only consolidates his own party but encroaches on theirs by boldly venturing into Selma, Ala., on Monday to woo black voters.

They also cringe as Bill continues his honey-crusted-nut-bar meltdown. With his usual exquisite timing, just as Pennsylvanians were about to vote, Hillary’s husband became the first person ever to play the Caucasian Card. First, he blurted out to a radio interviewer that the Obama camp had played the race card against him after he compared Obama’s strength in South Carolina to Jesse Jackson’s. And then, with a Brobdingnagian finger-wagging on the screen, he denied it to an NBC News reporter.

“You always follow me around and play these little games, and I’m not going to play your games today,” he said, accusing the reporter of looking for “another cheap story to divert the American people from the real urgent issues before us.”

If there’s one person who knows about crass diversions, it’s Bill. But even for him, it was an embarrassing explosion, capped with some blue language to an aide that was caught on air.

The Democrats are eager to move on to an Obama-McCain race. But they can’t because no one seems to be able to show Hillary the door. Despite all his incandescent gifts, Obama has missed several opportunities to smash the ball over the net and end the game. Again and again, he has seemed stuck at deuce. He complains about the politics of scoring points, but to win, you’ve got to score points.

He knew he tanked in the Philadelphia debate, but he was so irritated by the moderators — and by having to stand next to Hillary again — that he couldn’t summon a single merry dart.

Is he skittish around her because he knows that she detests him and he’s used to charming everyone? Or does he feel guilty that he cut in line ahead of her? As the husband of Michelle, does he know better than to defy the will of a strong woman? Or is he simply scared of Hillary because she’s scary?

He is frantic to get away from her because he can’t keep carbo-loading to relate to the common people.

In the final days in Pennsylvania, he dutifully logged time at diners and force-fed himself waffles, pancakes, sausage and a Philly cheese steak. He split the pancakes with Michelle, left some of the waffle and sausage behind, and gave away the French fries that came with the cheese steak.

But this is clearly a man who can’t wait to get back to his organic scrambled egg whites. That was made plain with his cri de coeur at the Glider Diner in Scranton when a reporter asked him about Jimmy Carter and Hamas.

“Why” he pleaded, sounding a bit, dare we say, bitter, “can’t I just eat my waffle?”

His subtext was obvious: Why can’t I just be president? Why do I have to keep eating these gooey waffles and answering these gotcha questions and debating this gonzo woman?

Before they devour themselves once more, perhaps the Democrats will take a cue from Dr. Seuss’s “Marvin K. Mooney Will You Please Go Now!” (The writer once mischievously redid it for his friend Art Buchwald as “Richard M. Nixon Will You Please Go Now!”) They could sing:

“The time has come. The time has come. The time is now. Just go. ... I don’t care how. You can go by foot. You can go by cow. Hillary R. Clinton, will you please go now! You can go on skates. You can go on skis. ... You can go in an old blue shoe.

Just go, go, GO!”

nytimes.com