Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Waste & want

Last Thursday (24 September), next to a photo of Belgian farmers spraying milk on a field in protest against low milk prices, the Times reported:

"An emergency meeting over the collapse in the price of milk will be held by Europe's agriculture ministers in Brussels on October 5 (Carl Mortished reports). The crisis talks have been convened by Sweden as farmers in mainland Europe continue their 'milk strike', dumping hundreds of thousands of litres of milk on farmland.The sudden fall in the price of milk products worldwide is causing pain for dairy farmers at a time when the European Commission is unwinding its dairy support regime."

Mortished ended by pointing out, revealingly:

"The recent price collapse follows a surge in 2007 in global prices for milk powder and butter. This led to more production, which came on the market as the recession hit demand."

This is typical of what regularly happens under capitalism. It's how "the market" works. When the price goes up in some sector of production each business in that sector, in the hope of making more profits, plans to expand production assuming that it rather than its rivals will get the extra sales. The result is that, in the end, when the new productive capacity comes on stream it is found that more has been produced than can be sold.

There is "overproduction" in relation to paying demand not to real needs of course. In this particular case, no one can argue that there is not a crying need for milk powder in some parts of the world, as the papers are full of reports of famine in the Horn of Africa and of appeals for money to relieve this.

It is true that the small milk producers in some European countries, like small primary producers everywhere, are also victims of the vicissitudes of the world market which can't be controlled and of which we all have to suffer the consequences.

Yet another proof, if one were needed, that capitalism is not a system geared to meeting people's needs, and so should be replaced by one that is.

ALB

1 comment:

purplearcanist said...

" Last Thursday (24 September), next to a photo of Belgian farmers spraying milk on a field in protest against low milk prices, the Times reported:"

But low milk prices are good for the consumer (unless its through a subsidy). The people that are dumping the milk are asking government to raise the price a la force.

"An emergency meeting over the collapse in the price of milk will be held by Europe's agriculture ministers in Brussels on October 5 (Carl Mortished reports). The crisis talks have been convened by Sweden as farmers in mainland Europe continue their 'milk strike', dumping hundreds of thousands of litres of milk on farmland.The sudden fall in the price of milk products worldwide is causing pain for dairy farmers at a time when the European Commission is unwinding its dairy support regime."

So? Why don't they switch production. Its obvious that what they are currently producing is unprofitable.

"Mortished ended by pointing out, revealingly:

"The recent price collapse follows a surge in 2007 in global prices for milk powder and butter. This led to more production, which came on the market as the recession hit demand.""

The bubble was caused by government, not the free market. Sorry.

"This is typical of what regularly happens under capitalism."

This is what happens when you focus only on the benefits/costs to one group, and evaluate capitalism by that standard.

"It's how "the market" works. When the price goes up in some sector of production each business in that sector, in the hope of making more profits, plans to expand production assuming that it rather than its rivals will get the extra sales. The result is that, in the end, when the new productive capacity comes on stream it is found that more has been produced than can be sold."

This is the overproduction myth. In reality, businesses that did this would quickly lose profits.

"There is "overproduction" in relation to paying demand not to real needs of course. In this particular case, no one can argue that there is not a crying need for milk powder in some parts of the world, as the papers are full of reports of famine in the Horn of Africa and of appeals for money to relieve this."

Why don't you cheer the lower milk prices, as it helps people who otherwise can't get it? That is, if someone produced it more efficiently.

"It is true that the small milk producers in some European countries, like small primary producers everywhere, are also victims of the vicissitudes of the world market which can't be controlled and of which we all have to suffer the consequences."

Actually, in the market, everyone benefits. While there might be competition, it is competition of who can help people more in X.

"Yet another proof, if one were needed, that capitalism is not a system geared to meeting people's needs, and so should be replaced by one that is."

1. A proof is needed.
2. This doesn't qualify as a proof, sorry.
3. Capitalism is a system geared to meeting people's needs, because it allows effective communication of these needs. Whether people correctly know what they need is a question for devate.