Mexico's bargaining chips with Trump? How about a corn boycott

nhboy

Ubi bene ibi patria
" First domesticated here 10,000 years ago, corn is not only a staple of the Mexican diet, but also a symbol of Mexico itself. Since the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1994, it has also become a symbol of Mexico’s growing economic dependence on the United States.

Now, as President Trump threatens Mexico with drastic changes on trade, its leaders are wielding corn as a weapon. Mexico’s Senate is considering legislation calling for a boycott of U.S. corn, and the government has begun negotiating with Argentina and Brazil to import corn from those nations tax-free.

The threat of a boycott is Mexico’s latest and perhaps cleverest attempt to fight back against Trump, whose threats to pull out of free trade agreements and slap a 20% import tax on Mexican products have shaken confidence in Mexico’s economy. "

http://www.latimes.com/world/mexico-americas/la-fg-mexico-corn-boycott-20170329-story.html
 

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
:lol:

If Trump really wanted to put the screws to them, he'd sign a Mexican travel ban. Bye bye, tourism!
 

PrchJrkr

Long Haired Country Boy
Ad Free Experience
Patron
More good news from the boy. He's on a roll lately.:yay:

Mexico no longer imports US corn.
US market sees a surplus of corn.
Corn prices plummet making it more affordable to the consumer.
Ethanol subsidies end, making ####ty gasoline go away.
Farmers shift to growing hemp.
Textile plants increase production of hemp-based products.

How's THAT for putting Americans back to work?

Trump 2020! :patriot:
 

Wishbone

New Member
If these Marxist whackadoodles really think it hurts the economy as much as they claim... Don't send us any more Mexicans.
 

Chris0nllyn

Well-Known Member
More good news from the boy. He's on a roll lately.:yay:

Mexico no longer imports US corn.
US market sees a surplus of corn.
Corn prices plummet making it more affordable to the consumer. All of the above won't affect corn farmers huh? They won't require even more govt. subsidies to grow corn?
Ethanol subsidies end, making ####ty gasoline go away. No subsidies to pay the farmers who can't sell their corn. (I'm okay with these subsidies going away, btw)
Farmers shift to growing hemp. With the current AG (Sessions) saying marijuana is the devil? I doubt it. (I'm okay with growing hemp)
Textile plants increase production of hemp-based products.

How's THAT for putting Americans back to work?

Trump 2020! :patriot:

I applaud your outlook, but it won't happen like that.
 

Chris0nllyn

Well-Known Member
I am tired of the GOv. Paying Farmers NOT TO GROW

Well then you're in luck, because that's not what those subsidies are.

For one, 75% of federal subsidies go to 10% of farmers. Farmers are growing corn (in 2010, US farmers supplied 32% of the world's corn supply), they just aren't making any money from it. The govt. is giving them extra money for their crops and guaranteeing a price floor. If the price per bushel of corn is X, and the govt. price floor is Y, the govt. pays the farmer the difference. Corn subsidies alone make up almost $3 billion (and the highest share of crop subsidies).
 

black dog

Free America
Corns at $ 3.50+
Soy beans are at $ 9.60+
Hemp is the miracle crop, I don't think so.


Why Legalized Hemp Will Not Be A Miracle Crop



There has never been a good reason for the ban on industrial hemp. It's no more harmful than industrial switchgrass, or industrial lumber for that matter. But at the same time, the claims of hemp activists are often overblown. It's a highly useful, highly versatile crop, but its utility is, for the most part, fairly marginal, at least going by the size of its existing markets and estimates for how big a domestic U.S. market could be.

That “activists” have rallied behind hemp is, of course, mainly due to its relationship to marijuana. The plants are cousins — both are cannabis. Not that hemp should ever have been illegal, but it’s hard to imagine that if flax or jute were for some reason illegal, such a large, politically-tinged campaign would be organized around legalizing either of them. As with any political movement, hemp activism has generated tons of wildly exaggerated claims, such as when a Daily Kos writer in 2011 declared that “Industrial Hemp can save America.”

But good for the activists, since they appear to be winning, as they should. Several states have formally legalized hemp production, though most of them are waiting for the federal government to come around, since hemp, incredibly enough, is still classified as a Schedule I narcotic. That means the government considers it among the most dangerous of illegal drugs and attaches the most severe criminal penalties to it. Even though smoking it would do no more than perhaps give you a headache. Like marijuana, hemp contains the psychoactive ingredient THC, but in such small amounts it’s almost not measurable in hemp.

Early this month, a farmer in Colorado harvested the first legally produced industrial hemp crop in 56 years. It’s not even quite legal there, even by state law (regulations governing hemp production are set to go into effect next year), but farmer Ryan Loflin went ahead and cultivated 55 acres of the stuff, some of which will be processed into oil and sold to Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soaps, a major U.S. buyer of hemp.

With states like Colorado and Washington making marijuana legal for recreational use, and many others legalizing medical marijuana, the nation’s laws and attitudes regarding the cannabis plant are quickly changing. It seems likely that a thriving hemp market will finally develop here.

But “thriving” doesn’t mean “huge” — not by a longshot. Worldwide, only about 200,000 acres of land were devoted to hemp cultivation in 2011, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization, with that number being “flat to decreasing” in recent years in the 30 countries where hemp is cultivated. Meanwhile, in North Dakota alone, flax was harvested from more than 315,000 acres (95 percent of the U.S. crop) in 2012, according to the Agricultural Marketing Resource Association. For further perspective, consider that corn is planted on about 85 million acres in the U.S. alone every year (though that might say more about our reliance on corn than it says about hemp.)

Demand for hemp isn’t as high as hemp’s loudest proponents would have it.
There are good reasons for this. Chief among them is demand, which isn’t as high as hemp’s loudest proponents would have it. In Europe, demand fell through the 20th century as industrial buyers increasingly chose cheaper or better alternatives for many applications — often artificial fibers. That phenomenon has been replicated elsewhere. And as more uses for hemp have been found, demand has grown, but not at levels that would indicate a coming hemp revolution.

The crop’s illegality in the United States hasn’t helped either, of course, though imports of hemp-based products — many of them from China — have been legal since 1998. The total retail market for hemp in the United States is only about $500 million. That will no doubt grow with domestic cultivation — and perhaps with innovations in manufacturing technologies that could increase demand. But hemp is unlikely to ever be a world-changer.

Best known historically for its use to make paper and rope (neither of which are often made with hemp these days, because there are better materials), the crop’s versatility is its major selling point. It’s used in the manufacture of fabrics, household products, fuels, plastics, construction materials, and all kinds of other stuff. It has gained some popularity as a food ingredient in recent years. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has said that “the market potential for hemp seed as a food ingredient is unknown. However, it probably will remain a small market, like those for sesame and poppy seeds.”

The one big benefit of hemp? Its environmental footprint is relatively small. It requires few pesticides and no herbicides.
The one big benefit of hemp? Its environmental footprint is relatively small. It requires few pesticides and no herbicides. It’s an excellent rotation crop, often used to suppress weeds and loosen soil before the planting of winter cereals. On the other hand, it requires a relatively large amount of water, and its need for deep, humus-rich, nutrient-dense soil limits growing locales.

And hemp cultivation is highly labor intensive. Loflin, the Colorado farmer, took to social media to recruit 45 people to help him harvest his crop by hand over a weekend. “Use of a mechanical combine,” the Denver Post reported, “would have harmed the plants’ stalks.” That’s one reason prices are so high — about six times the cost of wood pulp. Hemp is an annual crop, which means it must be stored in order to be processed throughout the year, further adding to the cost of using it — and to the incentive for using something else.

Production of hemp varies considerably year to year, but in general, it had been steadily but slowly rising. In 1999, 250 million pounds were produced, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization; in 2011, it was 280 million. That’s pounds, not tons. The FAO says the increase is mainly due to rising demand for food, supplements and body-care products made with hemp. Sales of such products are at the mercy of consumer whims. It would be better news for hemp if industrial uses comprised the main driver of demand. Once hemp becomes more commonplace, consumers might prefer to just go back to Aveeno lotions and Dreyer’s ice cream.

None of which is to say that the outlook for hemp is not bright. It certainly seems to be, as long as we keep things in their proper perspective. That means ignoring claims such as hemp becoming a “trillion-dollar crop” that “could finally allow people to grow money on trees.”

http://modernfarmer.com/2013/10/legal-industrial-hemp-wont-matter/
 
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