PDA

View Full Version : Pigs Fly and Prices Go Nuts



mick silver
31st July 2011, 10:08 AM
http://www.321gold.com/editorials/benson/benson071911.html ...
Richard Benson
Posted Jul 19, 2011
When business slows down over the summer months, I finally have some time to reflect and do a little economic detective work and, yes, an occasional jig saw puzzle. Trying to figure out what is going on in the world these days is extraordinarily similar to putting the pieces of a puzzle together. Within the pile of pieces, you know there’s a picture somewhere but until you snap those last few pieces into place, the puzzle won’t be complete.
The latest puzzle I wanted to solve began when I went to the supermarket and picked up one of the few items my wife lets me buy, which is a large jar of cashews. I seem to recall a few years ago they were $7, last year, they spiked to $11, and now, suddenly, they’re $15. Because my beloved nuts rose in price so much it has driven me nuts, and I had to understand why!
Numerous articles that I’ve read recently in the financial press and elsewhere about China have put some pieces of the puzzle into place. In one, the Chinese apparently have developed a real taste for cashews and are buying them up left and right, driving up the price. In another, an article titled “Pigs Fly” in the Wall Street Journal mentioned hog prices and raising the daily limit on China buying American pork. Now, just as the Chinese are buying massive amounts of American corn and other grains, front page news shows both a massive heatwave and long-term drought in the US gravely affecting agriculture. Higher demand and restricted supply are forcing food prices up.
The Chinese love pork which amounts to over half of the meat they consume. Needless to say, the price of this meat is up 38 percent since the beginning of this year, which is a national concern in China. Fearing food riots, the Chinese government has recently released a large quantity of frozen pork from their strategic pork reserves to keep up with demand.

While America and other countries have strategic oil reserves, only China has a strategic pork reserve which tells you how important the price of hogs (and other food items) is. Food prices in China have been rising about 13% in the past year.
Normally, I wouldn’t make much of a connection between pigs flying and the price of nuts, but China’s policy last year to double the wages of working Chinese by offering wage hikes of 20 percent, and another 20 percent this year, was intended to prevent food riots. As long as the government keeps their promise going forward to raise wages, workers can continue to buy their sacred pigs. Feeding pigs requires more corn. Indeed, higher wages in China wouldn’t be a big issue for America except for the fact that there are 1.3 billion Chinese, they’re hungry, and now they have cash to spend. Another key piece to the puzzle just snapped into place!
The Chinese government is also still running trade surpluses selling Americans manufactured doodads and toys, and has amassed over $3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves they can use to spend on hogs, cows, chickens, corn, wheat, soybeans, rice, nuts, and anything else they may need to eat. Indeed, China could buy every bushel of grain and every farm animal in America with the money we have given them, and hardly dent their foreign exchange holdings.
So, when I look at the last piece of this summer’s puzzle, the picture is pretty clear. If you’re an American, it’s not a pretty picture. Food prices are not going to be determined by Americans, whose wages and jobs are stagnant. Food prices are going to be determined by the Chinese who outnumber us four to one, and whose wages are soaring, and whose government has over $3 trillion in spare change to buy food for them. So, when you go to the supermarket because you want to get something to eat you might not be able to afford it. China will likely buy our food with our money, and just leave us the scraps. For the next few years, count on food prices continuing to go nuts!
###

mick silver
31st July 2011, 10:11 AM
it loks to me more of the food grow here heading oversea . if this is happening this will drive the price up . maybe we are paying china back with food

Spectrism
31st July 2011, 10:14 AM
And as China grows in production, consumption and wages, we can all expect that prices of commodities will skyrocket... of course with the help of a devaluing dollar.

Amerika is doomed without production... without the ability to add value to raw materials and without the ability to aquire raw materials cheaply. Refineries, steel mills, textile mills, electronics factories, etc., etc...... all gone to China. Just how can anyone think that there will be a world of peace with opponents owning all our capabilities and at our expense? They got our research, technology and developed industries FREE!!!! We gave it to them!

The People's Republic thanks you and now you die.

Santa
31st July 2011, 10:56 AM
And as China grows in production, consumption and wages, we can all expect that prices of commodities will skyrocket... of course with the help of a devaluing dollar.

Amerika is doomed without production... without the ability to add value to raw materials and without the ability to aquire raw materials cheaply. Refineries, steel mills, textile mills, electronics factories, etc., etc...... all gone to China. Just how can anyone think that there will be a world of peace with opponents owning all our capabilities and at our expense? They got our research, technology and developed industries FREE!!!! We gave it to them!

The People's Republic thanks you and now you die.

Isn't it plain to see that the objective is global governance? That means no more sovereign nation status.

America served it's purpose and was considered useful for the proliferation of the dollar hegemony since WWII, but now it's time for the US to face the new paradigm.

The idea is to give birth to a global network of corporate entities connected into a central AI mainframe known by some as SATAn which efficiently analyzes and augments all socioeconomic criteria and in turn is monitored and cared for by a small coterie of chosen ones who implement its directives.

Welcome to a brave new world. >:D

gunDriller
31st July 2011, 01:35 PM
i refuse to pay the higher prices.

i will probably eventually have to raise pigs along with pig-food, because i love bacon, and it's getting expensive.