Corporate Agribusiness Divides Farmers
Why is conventional agriculture so wound up? Are they afraid of organic agriculture? What's all the fuss about? After all, a recent study by the Lieberman Research Group showed that organic food sales account for only 3.5% of all food product sales in the US.
A September 2009 Prairie Farmer article titled, "Here Is What's Not Sustainable" leads me to believe that the author, a spokesperson for conventional agriculture, dislikes and even fears organic farming and its supporters.
The author admits to feeling self-satisfaction in knowing that organic farmers are suffering in a falling economy, I doubt many people share her sentiments. Farmers generally have the attitude that "we are all in this together", no matter what farming practices we use.
Still, _Michael Pollan <http://www.grist.org/article/
Most farmers I know, (not all but most), see organic farming as just another way to farm, curious, perhaps a bit backward, but to most conventional farmers organic farming doesn't even register. With agribusiness however, it's another story. They're not content with just 96.5% of the food system, they want it all.
Those who have their priorities confused, need to figure out who their enemies really are.
Conventional farm milk prices have dropped by nearly 50% over the past year. Dean Foods controls 80% of the fluid milk market in some states and 40% of the market in the US; their net profits more than doubled in the last year.
Conventional hog farmers have experienced losses for two straight years. Tyson, the second largest food company in the US, controls 40% of the US meat market. They reported a profitable third quarter for every segment of their business, including pork.
When the farm price for beef cattle dropped $.08 per pound, consumers were paying $.17 more per pound at the supermarket. Average retail beef processing margins across all companies, increased 13% over 2008.
And guess what, none of that was caused by organic farmers.
Corporate agribusiness has a problem with organic farmers because they haven't yet figured out a way to totally bleed them like they have conventional farmers. But as surely as corporate agriculture is working its way into the organic market, we suffer from their growing control.
While farm prices have trended downward for the past couple of years, food price decline has lagged far behind. As farm input costs have continued to climb, so have corporate profits.
Even in the toughest of economic times, the corporate buyers and sellers profit while farmers loose. A recent New York Times editorial points out the dangers of powerful corporations (specifically Monsanto); controlling seed supplies, their market control and their anticompetitive behavior.
Agribusiness spends multi-millions on lobbyists. Their lobbying efforts are aimed at increasing their profits, not farmer income or benefits to the consumer. They lobby for more cheap raw imports, less labeling, less restrictions on pesticide use and weaker environmental standards.
The Prairie Farmer tells us anyone who believes organic, sustainable and locally grown is the only way to feed the world is wrong. Contrary to their opinion, there is plenty of evidence that organic production is a viable means of producing food and that organic farming may be the best way for the world to feed itself.
Since we are all in this together, perhaps we can dismiss the ill will of the Prairie Farmer editorial and agree that there is more than enough room for all responsible farmers to do their thing, conventional or organic?
Corporate agribusiness is riding roughshod over all farmers and it's time farmers recognized their real enemy.

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9 Comments so far
Show All"The Prairie Farmer tells us anyone who believes organic, sustainable and locally grown is the only way to feed the world is wrong"
The author of that Prairie Farmer article tries to make a case that organic activists are trying to reduce choice, by mandating organic production nationally. Well, I think we should mandate whatever is in the people's better interests rather than allow the corporate elites to mandate their interests at our expense. It was the corporate elites who wiped out our choices over the past several decades. They wiped out the family farmer we used to get our food from and the great variety of heirloom open-pollinated varieties of food crops, and the old production methods that were basically organic. Poof! Not only in food, but in nearly all sectors, the corporate elites wiped out our choice. Very little choice for transport besides cars. Very little choice in computers besides Microshaft/Intil. No choice in healthcare besides a collusion cartel that fixes prices at double what they should be. No choice but to feed the Pentagun its magnificent daily feast of two billion ducks. Is there really any competition in the energy markets? Hell no. Collusion runs rampant there too. What choice is there for the people when corporate elites control federal policies? Now what about that food? We got only cavendash bananas, while there is an infinite variety of bananas in the wilds. 300 million USans get only the Hasss avocados, and I get a dozen types. I don't think corporate elites brought the little purple tomatillos to my farmer's market. Corporate elites want to narrow our choice of food ingredients to high fructose corn syrup, and wheat with the embryo and hull smashed off! No choice for the people, if the "invisible hand" of the market is to work its "magic"!
Um, this has been happening for 50 years already. Get rid of the Big Agri subsidies completely and let it fail. Small farmers need to be freed of the regulations being thrust against them as well.
Kernelz, "conventional" farmers are part of Big Agri that is being oversubsidized by government while organic farmers are facing persecution and given no subsidies by government.
Very often those regulations are consciously designed to benefit corporate factory farms. Were I to keep more than 99 laying hens on my farm, I would be subject to very hefty fines. The other option is to purchase an expensive license to keep more. The large producers (i.e. chicken prisons and their industry group) are pushing to make it even harder for small player like me.
Douglas, that's true and yet here we have Congress preparing to pass more such persecuting legislation against not only small farmers but people who want to grow their own veggie gardens in their own back yard (HR 875) ! Big Agri gets to slop it all at the trough while you and countless farmers face persecution hell. I have heard about NAIS as well. Big Brother and Big Agri together in one ! ARRGH !
P.S.: Surpringly, some Republicans and Blue Dog Democrats from their rural districts oppose such persecution of small farmers.
The second amendment to the US constitution is our immunity to all federal regulations on the homestead. We're using a sort of natural selection technique to teach the feds who they are to regulate and who they are to leave alone.
Luckily HR 875 doesn't affect me (I'm not in the same country). But the Canadian government is headed in the NAIS direction.
How about organic farmers just doing their thing and not worrying about the conventional farmers? There is surely room in this country for both kinds and if the organic farming methods are superior that will become apparent and more farmers will go that route. All of this bickering is caused by a very small group of persons that are quite vocal about their beliefs but still manage to get many followers. We need to work together more on problems rather that develop radical division on nearly everything these days.
I don't see much of a spat between the 'organic' and 'conventional' so long as the 'conventional farmer' keeps his pesticides and inorganic fertilizers on his side of the road and not allow them to drift onto my crops.... The REAL problem is 'agra-business' which promotes GMO plantations and tresspass onto other farmers property to "test" for their GMO tracer in the crops. Agra-business also promotes illegal immigration, lower wages for field hands, mono-culture farming, (which often promotes soil erosion and killing off of natural pollenators) and the corruption of politicians at all levels of government.
I fully support your 'work together' conclusion, but believe you may have the wrong target in the cross hairs.
Did you not read the article? How about conventional agriculture letting organic farming do its thing?