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                Gary North's REALITY CHECK

Issue 339                                    April 27, 2004

                    OUTSOURCING FOOD

     In a recent PBS show on China, the narrator said that
only 7% of China's land is arable.  So, every acre is used
to grow food.  This means that China is a large-scale
version of Japan in agriculture.

     Next, the narrator reported that farm output is low.
Chinese farms average one acre.  This means that land
prices are high.  In such situations, complementary factor
prices are low -- specifically, labor.  The price of land
is bid very high, leaving less for bidding up the price of
labor.  What does get bid up is the price of substitutes.
If land prices are high in region A, it will pay to clear
the swamp in region B.  Up goes the price of swamp-draining
equipment.

     Under such conditions, the move of rural people to
cities is inevitable, assuming there is a market for the
output of urban labor.  Wages are higher in cities, because
worker productivity is not based so heavily on land.  This
is why skyscrapers are everywhere in Shanghai.  This is why
apartment houses are common in cities.  They aren't in the
country.

     Cities with millions of people are now developing all
over China.  This was not equally true in the past because
worker output was low in cities under Communism.  But with
the freeing of markets, capital is flowing back into China,
especially from Taiwan.  Capital inside the country is
flowing to high-output urban workers.  This is increasing
the price of labor.  So, the move from the countryside to
cities is a flood.  There has been nothing comparable to
this in human history.  The closest that any nation has
come is India.  But arable land is more abundant in India.
The economic pressure to leave the farm is not equally
great.

     China imports food, just as Japan does.  China will
import a lot more food as labor output increases in cities.
People want to eat better.  Imports of food will allow
this.

     It is clear what is happening: China is outsourcing
its food production.  Not all of it, surely.  Chinese
farmers still feed themselves and their families.  But they
cannot feed the masses that are moving to the cities.
Agricultural productivity in China is too low.

     Agricultural output in the Canada, the United States,
and Australia is so high that there is plenty of surplus
production.  The Chinese see this and are taking advantage
of it.  They are even developing a taste for wheat.  It's
called "Big Mac."  Nobody is going to starve in the West as
a result of Chinese imports of food.

     We hear no warnings from American politicians that
this is bad for China.  It is surely not bad for American
farmers.  Outsourcing food production is eminently sensible
for China, all people seem to agree -- at least media
pundits and Congressmen agree, which in their view
constitutes all people.

     This leads me to a consideration of outsourcing in
general.  What is sensible for Chinese, who want to eat
better and cheaper, is also sensible for members of any
economic group who want to increase their consumption but
cannot do so based on existing production inside those
invisible lines called national borders.  They should
outsource whatever they do not produce efficiently.  This
is clear with respect to food, but it is equally true
conceptually in other areas of the world economy.

     China is outsourcing food production.  America is
outsourcing textile production.  Meanwhile, Japan is
outsourcing soybean production.  America is outsourcing
Toyota production.

     Is this the end of prosperity for America?  Imagine
the following news reports:

     (DES MOINES, IOWA) - Jeremiah V. Jones, a farmer
     living in nearby Elkhart, thinks it will be a
     very good year.  "The weather has been excellent.
     We ought to get a good crop."  This fall he
     planted Toyotas.  "We rotate the crops, of
     course.  In fall, we plant Toyotas.  In spring,
     it's Nissans.  In summer, we usually plant
     Isuzus, mostly for ground cover.  It works out
     well most years, although a drought three summers
     ago wiped out half our Isuzus."

     When asked about models and colors, he says he's
     betting on red winter Toyotas.  "Pretty hardy
     crop.  Withstands cold weather better than the
     metallic blue variety.  Good crop for Iowa.
     'Course, if anything comes of this global warming
     business, we may have to switch.  No signs of it
     yet, though."

     (NAGOYA, JAPAN) -Toshiro Uda, director of the
     Tanaka Soybean Works, is guardedly optimistic
     about prospects for soybean sales this year.
     "Demand remains high.  But why not? This is
     Japan, after all.  Our main concern is with
     supply.  The whole industry has been adding plant
     capacity.  The new robots have really streamlined
     production."

     Mr. Uda pointed with obvious pride to the main
     floor of his spotlessly clean factory.  Only
     three men were visible, sitting in front of
     computer screens, monitoring every aspect of the
     soybean production process, from the "just in
     time" deliveries at the front end of the factory
     to the robot-controlled packaging as the newly
     canned beans headed to the docking area.
     "Nothing else like it in the industry," he said.


WHO BUYS WHAT?

     These two news reports sound like something out of a
bizarre science fiction short story about some future era
where nanotechnology -- manufacturing at the molecular
level -- has become a reality.  Economically, however, both
reports are the essence of a modern economy.  Sometimes it
takes a little surrealism to make economics clear to
people.

     The farmer in Iowa who plants soybeans or any other
crop aimed at the market has no intention of personally
eating his crop - certainly not soybeans.  In the United
States, soybeans are eaten mostly by household pets and
certain health food devotees.  Most of the soybean crop is
exported, and a significant portion winds up in Japan.

     The goal of farmer Jones is not to consume soybeans.
He plans to buy something else.  He wants money.  He will
sell the crop to the highest bidder, but agricultural crops
being what they are, a uniform price will confront all
soybean farmers, adjusted for transportation costs and
other minor differences.  In the bidding war, the Japanese
importers of soybeans usually win.  They buy the lion's
share of the crop.  Soybean oil is used for many products.
Fido and kitty get most of whatever remains.  Although I
find it difficult to imagine, I suppose the rest goes into
soybean burgers.

     Similarly, the goal of Mr. Uda is not to drive a fleet
of Toyotas.  He plans to buy something else.  He wants
money.  He will sell the Toyotas to the highest bidder, but
car sales being what they are, a lot of non-price
competition exists: models, colors, and features.  In the
bidding war, the Americans will buy, if not the lion's
share, then at least a good-sized black bear's share.

     Taken as an individual, farmer Jones may or may not
buy a Toyota or feed his household pets soybeans.  Mr. Uda
may or may not eat more soybeans or buy a new Toyota this
year.  But taken as nations, a lot of Joneses will buy
Toyotas, and a lot of Udas will buy soybeans.

     The economic question is: What is the least expensive
way for the Joneses to buy their Toyotas, and for the Udas
to buy their soybeans?


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GETTING THE MONEY TO BUY

     To buy a Toyota produced in Japan, Mr. Jones will need
some Japanese yen.  To buy some soybeans, Mr. Uda will need
some dollars.  But neither Mr. Jones nor Mr. Uda normally
handles the currency of the other nation.  So,
intermediaries in both countries (or maybe in a third
country) intervene to make it possible for both Jones and
Uda to buy what they want.  They sell dollars to the
Japanese importer who wants to import soybeans.  They sell
dollars for yen.  They sell yen to the American importer
who wants a shipment of Toyotas.  They sell yen for
dollars.  Back and forth, back and forth: the currency
traders are always in search of a lower price for the
currency they plan to buy next.  The importers then sell
their newly imported products to buyers in their respective
nations

     How do the soybean farmers get the dollars to pay the
importers of Toyotas? They grow soybeans.  How do the
Toyota manufacturers get the yen to buy the soybeans? They
manufacture Toyotas.  So far, so good.

     The Iowa farmer is uniquely equipped to grow soybeans.
He has a tremendous advantage here.  The Japanese
manufacturer is not uniquely equipped to manufacture
Toyotas.  Land costs in Japan are high: too high for
growing soybeans -- low value per square foot -- but not
too high for manufacturing Toyotas.  It would be a lot more
expensive for the Iowa farmer to shift production to Japan
than it would be for the Toyota manufacturer to build a
Toyota factory in Iowa.

     The economic reality is this: the soybeans will move
from Iowa to Japan for as long as the high bidders for
soybeans are in Japan.  Meanwhile, Toyotas will move from
Nagoya to America for as long as the higher bidders are in
America and the overall costs of production plus export
remain lower in Nagoya.


GIVING A GOOD ACCOUNT

     I would rather drive a Toyota than eat soybeans.
There are Japanese who would rather dine on soybeans --
presumably a great deal of soybeans -- than drive a Toyota.
As always, there is no accounting for taste.  There is,
however, accounting for cost of production.

     Accountants on both sides of the Pacific Ocean are
fluent in a strange and arcane language: double-entry
bookkeeping.  The discovery and development of double-entry
accounting was one of the greatest discoveries of all time.
It allows specialists in accounting to inform a producer
regarding the success or failure of his efforts.  The
market provides the numbers: income vs. expenditures. The
accountants inform the producers: "keep up the good work"
vs. "shut the whole thing down until you figure out a
cheaper way."  When the producers listen to their
accountants, an amazing thing happens: soybeans get grown
in Iowa, and Toyotas get built in Nagoya.

     Well, maybe this is not so amazing.  But explaining to
people how this happens is more difficult than you might
imagine.  People really do not understand the whole
process.  This is why politicians can frequently persuade
voters to erect barriers to imports.  Politicians rarely
campaign on a platform of "Let's pay more for the things we
enjoy!" but they often campaign on a platform of "unfair
competition." They get elected, too.


THE ECONOMIST'S DISADVANTAGE

     Economists have discovered a way for drivers and
diners to fulfill their respective desires with the least
expenditure of money.  It is called free trade.  Each
producer specializes in what he does best, that is, does
with the least expenditure of scarce economic resources.
Each consumer is therefore able to take advantage of the
cost-effective production methods of the least wasteful
producers.  The trouble is, economists have not always been
as successful in explaining this as the politicians have
been in persuading voters to go along with tariff increases
and import quotas.  It is not easy to persuade voters in
either country that Iowa farmers are really growing
Toyotas, while Nagoya workers are really producing soy
beans.  It is not easy for most voters to grasp the fact
that the laws of physics and biology are different from the
laws of economics: specifically, the law of comparative
advantage.

     The politician looks at the short run.  "Look at all
the jobs that these imports are destroying." The economist
looks at the long run: "Look at all the choices each
individual can make." Voters see unemployed workers or
read about them.  They have a lot more trouble relating
their increased number of affordable choices to the
decrease of restraints on trade.  People frequently vote in
terms of short-run issues, especially visible ones.  So,
the politician has long enjoyed an advantage over the
economist in persuading people to support restraints on
trade.  It takes a very good economist to make the case for
long-term personal advantage for many consumers vs.
short-term advantages of reduced competition for specific
unemployed workers.  Adam Smith was a very good economist;
he made a persuasive case.  But not many people read Adam
Smith these days.

     Not being Adam Smith, I have taken a shorter path to
economic understanding: a bit of surrealism to make my
point.  So, I recommend that the next time you test drive a
Toyota, think about that Iowa farmer and how hard he works
to make your test drive economically possible.  But
remember: you are skipping the joys of eating several
soybean burgers in order to make your test drive possible.


CONCLUSION

     Yes, there is a lot of outsourcing going on.  There is
no doubt that this will continue until Japan can get its
soybean production up, and America can get its Toyota
knock-offs to run as well as Toyotas do.

     The point is, we are all part of the problem.  As
consumers, we keep telling retailers, loud and clear, that
we love bargains.   We put our money where our mouths are.
And when I say "we," I mean all people, great and small.
Even Arabs want a Jewish brother-in-law deal.

     [Note: in order to reduce demand on the fragile
     environment, I am using a recycled article.  It
     was published in "The Journal Formerly Known as
     'The Freeman'" in 1993.]


                     * * * * * * * * *

                        Appendix 81

     Abraham Case Study #354 is a perfect illustration of
the division of labor in action.  It comes from a
chiropractor.

     He lives in a city of 3.5 million people.  Two decades
ago, there were about 100 chiropractors there.  Now there
are 3,000.  The market is much tougher.

     He started out in a clinic that got only 15 visits a
day, spread over four practitioners.  He was allowed free
reign to practice as he chose, since he was experienced,
though a newcomer to the state.  The clinic's main source
of business came from attorneys, who referred injured
clients. Call this a symbiotic arrangement.

     Problem: the attorneys were starting to reduce the
referrals because of a backlog in narrative reports.  There
were 150 pending.  The chiropractors did not like
paperwork.  The newcomer created a template -- known by the
technical term among lawyers, "boilerplate" -- that low-
paid typists could use.  They entered the information, and
each chiropractor corrected it.  In three months, the
backlog was over, and attorneys started referring clients.
This pushed traffic to 80 a day.

     Think about this.  These men had walked away from a
huge increase in traffic because paperwork baffled them.
The new man with a digital template put the typists to
work, and the results were spectacular.  How had they
missed the obvious?  How had they let their distaste of
paperwork stymie them?  It's hard to believe.

     This is why it's possible for mildly creative
competitors to do well in almost any field.  The level of
entrepreneurship is universally low.

     How low?  The clinic refused to give the guy a raise.
So, he quit, i.e., "outsourced his employers."

     He went out on his own.  He hit pay dirt when he got a
call-in radio show on nutrition and health.  He treats scar
tissue and muscle knotting, which he says are the main
causes of chronic pain.  He uses this treatment as his USP:
unique selling proposition.

     He is a great marketer.  He was told that it would
take 4-6 months to build the audience and get calls.  On
the first show, he got 70 inquiries and 42 appointments.
Visits went from 15/week to 250/week.  Income went from
$5,000/month to $50,000/month. Staff: one doctor and a
part-time assistant to four doctors and three full-time
assistants.

     Outsourcing his former employers was a wise move on
his part.  They deliberately walked away from another flood
of money.

     He says he is a good speaker.  Of that, I have no
doubt!  One more time: even if you hate public speaking,
this skill is universally in demand.  As with
entrepreneurship, it is in short supply.  A good way to get
experience is with Toastmasters.

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screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
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directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
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