Thanks for this bit.
I've written of the US Sugar Quota that raises everyone's cost of living. Another consequence of this is that the demand of land for sugar beet has raised prices even higher than they were. So much so that soya bean producers can't afford to grow their crops. Hence the trek to Brazil.
Legislators simply don't understand the law of unintended consequences.
Harry
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Karen wrote:
Future Migration alert? Very interesting. Besides religious and political refugees, does anyone know of similar cases? Karen Watters Cole
Excerpt: U.S. Farmers Put Down Roots in Brazilian Soil
By SIMON ROMERO, NYT, 12.01.02 @ <http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/01/international/americas/01BRAZ.html>http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/01/international/americas/01BRAZ.html
LU�S EDUARDO MAGALH�ES, Brazil More than a century after his ancestors began farming in the Midwestern United States, Dan Carroll's best hope of bringing his son into the family business is to buy land in the savannas of Brazil.
Two months ago Mr. Carroll, of Carthage, Ill., bought a soybean farm on the outskirts of this dusty town of pickup trucks and barbecue restaurants 350 miles northeast of Bras�lia. He joined more than a dozen other Americans who have recently begun farming here.
Recent arrivals like Mr. Carroll and his son, John, have brought the number of American farmers in Brazil to more than 200, including a small Mennonite community, according to AgBrazil, a company in Columbia, Mo., that brokers Brazilian land deals.
Their numbers are expected to grow as Brazil's agricultural frontier expands. The recent decline of Brazil's currency, the real, weakened much of the economy but added value to export commodities, especially soybeans, in the last two years. Brazil's export surge is causing a sharp increase in the soybean crop across the cerrado, a vast region of grasslands and savannas. Brazil has about four times as much available farmland as the United States has, largely because of improvements in soil fertility and the development of soybeans suitable to the tropics. The expansion of Brazil's agricultural frontier in the last two years is roughly equal to Iowa's entire soybean acreage, according to the United States Department of Agriculture's Brazil report, which was published in November.
"The guys who come down here now are awestruck," said Thomas Shanks, a farmer from upstate New York who has been growing soybeans and corn in Brazil for the last four years. Most are lured by relatively cheap land. Prices vary but cleared land in western Bahia, the epicenter of the soybean boom, can be bought for about $700 an acre compared with $3,850 in Illinois. There are few restrictions on foreign ownership of land in Brazil.
"It's like getting a chance to open the Midwest to farming again," said Philip F. Warnken, the president and chief executive of AgBrazil, which conducts tours to the region each year. Farmers from Zimbabwe, Zambia and Canada have also taken part in his tours.
&In addition, American multinationals like Cargill and Bunge operate large soybean crushing plants here.
Despite similarities with the United States, however, the integration of American farmers is not without its problems. Few farmers speak fluent Portuguese, preferring to have bilingual managers, and most Americans live only part of the year in Brazil.
Still, the sheer availability of land appears to be on the side of farmers in Brazil, which is larger than the contiguous 48 American states. While it is second to the United States in soybean production, Brazil's output is growing faster. It is expected to produce a record 49 million tons of soybeans this harvest, up 13 percent from last year.
To the surprise of some Americans, the rapid expansion of Brazilian agriculture is rooted in policies pursued by the United States to encourage meat production overseas, partly to stimulate American soybean exports. Soybeans, which are high in protein, are often used to feed chickens and pigs.
American researchers helped Brazil in the 1970's to improve soils in the cerrado, helping transform what was once considered an inhospitable wasteland into what are now seemingly endless plains of farms. That assistance, said Richard A. Levins, professor of applied economics at the University of Minnesota, has boomeranged, in a "jolt to our king-of-the-hill mentality."
****************************** Harry Pollard Henry George School of LA Box 655 Tujunga CA 91042 [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tel: (818) 352-4141 Fax: (818) 353-2242 *******************************
--- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.416 / Virus Database: 232 - Release Date: 11/6/2002
