Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-16 Thread Hugh Thomas
There are many PhD's in economics, some with Nobel Prizes, that agree minimum
wage laws and unemployment benefits drive up the cost of production. This
is so easy to see that it is amazing anyone would think differently. If
minimum wage laws do not create unemployment, why not raise it to $100 per
hour, or even better, $500 per hour?

When China dumped their Soviet style, state planned economy for a free
market approach, they destroyed small manufacturing here in the US, simply
because to comply with the restrictive laws here is too expensive to
remain competitive.

Many see high-cost government regulation as being benign, a help to the
poor people. I see it differently. A 16 year-old kid could get real world
experience de-tasseling corn or planting tomatoes - that is - if
the government would allow him to work for a realistic wage. It is illegal
for this kid to work for $6 per hour, *even* *if he wants to*. He is denied
this experience, an experience for more valuable that much of the crap he
gets from government schools.

I would see it very hard to be objective about the question, More or less
government, when one makes their living from taxes collected by the
government which uses the threat of prison to get the loot.


On Fri, Aug 15, 2014 at 8:43 PM, Weinzierl, Richard A weinz...@illinois.edu
 wrote:

 At the risk of being just another university person weighing in on this,
 I agree with David's points.

 Jimmy Buffet said it well ... The gods' honest truth is, it's not that
 simple ... and that applies when it comes to free market economics and
 lots of other things. Governments, laws, and policies that consider the
 public good and the needs of those at the lower end of the socioeconomic
 scale are essential.  Our national policies are fraught with political
 motivations and a variety of other dishonesties that taint the real issues,
 but it is an oversimplification to expect that all would be fine if we
 abandoned minimum wage laws and cancelled unemployment benefits.

 And I admit that this is my personal view and not a research finding from
 my day job as an entomologist.

 Rick Weinzierl

 Professor and Extension Entomologist
 IL SARE PDP Coordinator
 Department of Crop Sciences, University of Illinois
 S-334 Turner Hall, 1102 S. Goodwin Avenue
 Urbana, IL 61801
 217-244-2126


 -Original Message-
 From: apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net [mailto:
 apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net] On Behalf Of David A. Rosenberger
 Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 8:31 PM
 To: Apple-crop discussion list
 Subject: Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

 So far as I know, there is no political quid pro quo for decisions on what
 products can be imported into the US or exported to other countries, and
 scientific concerns about importation of pests are given serious
 consideration.  Nevertheless, Bill's suggestion about trading apples for
 flip-flops hints at some factors that may ultimately impact negotiator
 positioning.  In this case, perhaps we should substitute soybeans for
 flip-flops.  Has anyone checked recently to see the value of soybeans and
 other ag exports from the US to China? And then of  course, we wouldn't
 want to  anger China into massive selling of the US securities that they
 have purchased over the past several decades while we spent our wealth on
 meaningless wars. Thus, we are inextricably linked in a world-wide economy
 that at times runs rough-shod over individual winners and losers.  In many
 cases, it is almost impossible to predict who those winners and losers will
 be as governments tug on the economic and
  political strings that interconnect countries.

 Reducing or eliminating minimum wage laws and unemployment insurance would
 not and will not solve any apple farmer problems related to US competitive
 capabilities in the world market. It would only increase the inequities and
 distancing of haves and have-nots in our county, inequities that ultimately
 contributed to the riots in major cities in the 1960's and that have
 contributed to current problems in Fergusson, MO.  Those who ignore
 history are doomed to repeat it.  It is very difficult to have a vibrant
 economy in the midst of anarchy. Increasing the gap between rich and poor
 while at the same time burning the bridges that allow social progress for
 those born into poverty will almost certainly increase the the probability
 of lawlessness among those without any hope for the future. Apple growers
 who think that they could live on the current minimum wage should try it
 for a year, recognizing of course that one must start the experiment
 without any housing, without a car, a
  nd with no credit rating.

 If you really believe that the free markets (i.e., no minimum wage, no
 unemployment benefits) will solve our problems consider this:  We already
 have a health care system that ranks somewhere around 29th when compared
 with those of other nations (and that was true before Obamacare was
 instituted).  Yet

Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-16 Thread David A. Rosenberger
 truth is, it's not that simple 
... and that applies when it comes to free market economics and lots of other 
things. Governments, laws, and policies that consider the public good and the 
needs of those at the lower end of the socioeconomic scale are essential.  Our 
national policies are fraught with political motivations and a variety of other 
dishonesties that taint the real issues, but it is an oversimplification to 
expect that all would be fine if we abandoned minimum wage laws and cancelled 
unemployment benefits.

And I admit that this is my personal view and not a research finding from my 
day job as an entomologist.

Rick Weinzierl

Professor and Extension Entomologist
IL SARE PDP Coordinator
Department of Crop Sciences, University of Illinois
S-334 Turner Hall, 1102 S. Goodwin Avenue
Urbana, IL 61801
217-244-2126tel:217-244-2126


-Original Message-
From: 
apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.netmailto:apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net
 
[mailto:apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.netmailto:apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net]
 On Behalf Of David A. Rosenberger
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 8:31 PM
To: Apple-crop discussion list
Subject: Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

So far as I know, there is no political quid pro quo for decisions on what 
products can be imported into the US or exported to other countries, and 
scientific concerns about importation of pests are given serious consideration. 
 Nevertheless, Bill's suggestion about trading apples for flip-flops hints at 
some factors that may ultimately impact negotiator positioning.  In this case, 
perhaps we should substitute soybeans for flip-flops.  Has anyone checked 
recently to see the value of soybeans and other ag exports from the US to 
China? And then of  course, we wouldn't want to  anger China into massive 
selling of the US securities that they have purchased over the past several 
decades while we spent our wealth on meaningless wars. Thus, we are 
inextricably linked in a world-wide economy that at times runs rough-shod over 
individual winners and losers.  In many cases, it is almost impossible to 
predict who those winners and losers will be as governments tug on the economic 
and
 political strings that interconnect countries.

Reducing or eliminating minimum wage laws and unemployment insurance would not 
and will not solve any apple farmer problems related to US competitive 
capabilities in the world market. It would only increase the inequities and 
distancing of haves and have-nots in our county, inequities that ultimately 
contributed to the riots in major cities in the 1960's and that have 
contributed to current problems in Fergusson, MO.  Those who ignore history 
are doomed to repeat it.  It is very difficult to have a vibrant economy in 
the midst of anarchy. Increasing the gap between rich and poor while at the 
same time burning the bridges that allow social progress for those born into 
poverty will almost certainly increase the the probability of lawlessness among 
those without any hope for the future. Apple growers who think that they could 
live on the current minimum wage should try it for a year, recognizing of 
course that one must start the experiment without any housing, without a car, a
 nd with no credit rating.

If you really believe that the free markets (i.e., no minimum wage, no 
unemployment benefits) will solve our problems consider this:  We already have 
a health care system that ranks somewhere around 29th when compared with those 
of other nations (and that was true before Obamacare was instituted).  Yet we 
pay a much higher price for our healthcare than Canada and the European 
countries that have better health care systems than we do, a fact that rather 
undermines the case that everything works fine if the government allows the 
free market (i.e., insurance and pharmaceutical companies and tort lawyers) to 
have their own way.


Dave Rosenberger, Professor Emeritus
Dept. of Plant Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology Cornell's Hudson Valley Lab, 
P.O. Box 727, Highland, NY 12528
   Office:  845-691-7231tel:845-691-7231Cell: 
845-594-3060tel:845-594-3060
http://blogs.cornell.edu/plantpathhvl/blog-2014/


On Aug 15, 2014, at 11:41 AM, Fleming, William 
w...@montana.edumailto:w...@montana.edu wrote:

 To me it just seems strange that we would allow importing apples from any 
 country when we depend on exports ourselves to market the excess amount of 
 fruit we produce.
 Maybe I'm just looking at it with too much common sense.
 Then again many times in trade agreements allowing an import of a product is 
 traded in exchange for export of another. Who knows, we might be trading 
 apples for flip-flops.
 Doesn't benefit the apple grower but may benefit an entirely different 
 industry, and a politician's campaign contributors.

 Bill

Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-16 Thread Hugh Thomas
 enough crime even with minimum wage laws in place.  My point
 is that the straight-line assumption that reducing wages reduces costs is
 overly simplistic because it ignores the complexity of society and the
 unexpected costs of “externals” that impact every business enterprise in a
 destabilized society.

  I am currently on a trip during which my wife and I have driven nearly
 2000 miles through PA, OH, MI, IN, IL, WI, and MN. It appears to me that
 the interstate highway system is is worse condition now than at anytime
 since I began driving 51 years ago. We have saved a lot of taxes by
 delaying maintenance on highways and bridges, but as a result, all of us
 are paying more for wear on our cars, delays due to slow traffic, and
 perhaps even increases in accidents attributable to poor roads.  If the
 current trend continues, apple growers will soon be obliged to ship apples
 only in trucks that have air-cushion suspension because I suspect the rough
 highways will bruise apples riding to market in trucks just as much as they
 bruise my butt riding in a mid-size car. The need for a public highway
 system, along with numerous other government “services”, illustrates why a
 functional government and taxation system are essential for a civilized
 society.  There is certainly plenty of government waste that should be
 eliminated, but I suspect that most of that “waste” is actually going to
 the wealthy (think lobbyists, beltway bandits, defense contractors, farm
 subsidies) rather than to the welfare segment of our society.


 
 Dave Rosenberger, Professor Emeritus
  Dept. of Plant Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology
  Cornell’s Hudson Valley Lab, P.O. Box 727, Highland, NY 12528
Office:  845-691-7231Cell: 845-594-3060
 http://blogs.cornell.edu/plantpathhvl/blog-2014/
  

  On Aug 16, 2014, at 2:35 AM, Hugh Thomas hughthoma...@gmail.com wrote:

  There are many PhD's in economics, some with Nobel Prizes, that agree minimum
 wage laws and unemployment benefits drive up the cost of production. This
 is so easy to see that it is amazing anyone would think differently. If
 minimum wage laws do not create unemployment, why not raise it to $100 per
 hour, or even better, $500 per hour?

  When China dumped their Soviet style, state planned economy for a free
 market approach, they destroyed small manufacturing here in the US,
 simply because to comply with the restrictive laws here is too expensive to
 remain competitive.

  Many see high-cost government regulation as being benign, a help to the
 poor people. I see it differently. A 16 year-old kid could get real world
 experience de-tasseling corn or planting tomatoes - that is - if
 the government would allow him to work for a realistic wage. It is illegal
 for this kid to work for $6 per hour, *even* *if he wants to*. He is
 denied this experience, an experience for more valuable that much of the
 crap he gets from government schools.

  I would see it very hard to be objective about the question, More or
 less government, when one makes their living from taxes collected by the
 government which uses the threat of prison to get the loot.


 On Fri, Aug 15, 2014 at 8:43 PM, Weinzierl, Richard A 
 weinz...@illinois.edu wrote:

 At the risk of being just another university person weighing in on
 this, I agree with David's points.

 Jimmy Buffet said it well ... The gods' honest truth is, it's not that
 simple ... and that applies when it comes to free market economics and
 lots of other things. Governments, laws, and policies that consider the
 public good and the needs of those at the lower end of the socioeconomic
 scale are essential.  Our national policies are fraught with political
 motivations and a variety of other dishonesties that taint the real issues,
 but it is an oversimplification to expect that all would be fine if we
 abandoned minimum wage laws and cancelled unemployment benefits.

 And I admit that this is my personal view and not a research finding from
 my day job as an entomologist.

 Rick Weinzierl

 Professor and Extension Entomologist
 IL SARE PDP Coordinator
 Department of Crop Sciences, University of Illinois
 S-334 Turner Hall, 1102 S. Goodwin Avenue
 Urbana, IL 61801
 217-244-2126


 -Original Message-
 From: apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net [mailto:
 apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net] On Behalf Of David A. Rosenberger
 Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 8:31 PM
 To: Apple-crop discussion list
  Subject: Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

  So far as I know, there is no political quid pro quo for decisions on
 what products can be imported into the US or exported to other countries,
 and scientific concerns about importation of pests are given serious
 consideration.  Nevertheless, Bill's suggestion about trading apples for
 flip-flops hints at some factors that may

Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-16 Thread Shoemaker, William H
Well-spoken Dave. My work experiences on farms from 7 on up were instrumental 
in my understanding the real world. I wish many more of our youth would have 
such an experience. I hope we can work together as Americans to contribute to a 
solution to the problems we face. The alternative is worse.



Bill

William H. Shoemaker

Retired fruit and vegetable horticulturist

University of Illinois

wshoe...@illinois.edumailto:wshoe...@illinois.edu


From: apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net 
[apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net] on behalf of David A. Rosenberger 
[da...@cornell.edu]
Sent: Saturday, August 16, 2014 8:05 AM
To: Apple-crop discussion list
Subject: Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

I agree with you, Hugh, that government regulations are rarely “benign”, and 
child labor restrictions that prevent young teenagers from gaining work 
experience are one of my pet peeves.  Much of what I learned about agriculture, 
work ethic, and the business world has come from growing up on a farm and then 
working on another farm and at farm markets from ages 11 to 16.

However, experience has shown that, in the absence of laws, ruthless employers 
will not pay $6/hr or perhaps even 60 cents per hour if they can get a needy 
labor force to work for 6 cents per hour (after deducting meals and housing).  
Our country decided the slavery issue in a bloody war many years ago, and most 
of us have no desire to return to that era. While minimum wage laws may drive 
up the price of production when a product is consider in the absence of 
externals, the issue is less clear of one considers the social costs of low 
wages. If the government does not provide any support for those at the low end 
of the social scale, then they have no choice but to attempt living via 
criminal enterprises and costs for guarding business investments increase.  In 
some countries and some eras, farmers have been unable to prevent theft of 
crops unless they posted guards around the fields 24 hr/day.  Would that be 
less expensive than paying minimum wages?

Obviously not all crime is caused by poverty, and our society already has more 
than enough crime even with minimum wage laws in place.  My point is that the 
straight-line assumption that reducing wages reduces costs is overly simplistic 
because it ignores the complexity of society and the unexpected costs of 
“externals” that impact every business enterprise in a destabilized society.

I am currently on a trip during which my wife and I have driven nearly 2000 
miles through PA, OH, MI, IN, IL, WI, and MN. It appears to me that the 
interstate highway system is is worse condition now than at anytime since I 
began driving 51 years ago. We have saved a lot of taxes by delaying 
maintenance on highways and bridges, but as a result, all of us are paying more 
for wear on our cars, delays due to slow traffic, and perhaps even increases in 
accidents attributable to poor roads.  If the current trend continues, apple 
growers will soon be obliged to ship apples only in trucks that have 
air-cushion suspension because I suspect the rough highways will bruise apples 
riding to market in trucks just as much as they bruise my butt riding in a 
mid-size car. The need for a public highway system, along with numerous other 
government “services”, illustrates why a functional government and taxation 
system are essential for a civilized society.  There is certainly plenty of 
government waste that should be eliminated, but I suspect that most of that 
“waste” is actually going to the wealthy (think lobbyists, beltway bandits, 
defense contractors, farm subsidies) rather than to the welfare segment of our 
society.


Dave Rosenberger, Professor Emeritus
Dept. of Plant Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology
Cornell’s Hudson Valley Lab, P.O. Box 727, Highland, NY 12528
   Office:  845-691-7231Cell: 845-594-3060
http://blogs.cornell.edu/plantpathhvl/blog-2014/


On Aug 16, 2014, at 2:35 AM, Hugh Thomas 
hughthoma...@gmail.commailto:hughthoma...@gmail.com wrote:

There are many PhD's in economics, some with Nobel Prizes, that agree minimum 
wage laws and unemployment benefits drive up the cost of production. This is so 
easy to see that it is amazing anyone would think differently. If minimum wage 
laws do not create unemployment, why not raise it to $100 per hour, or even 
better, $500 per hour?

When China dumped their Soviet style, state planned economy for a free market 
approach, they destroyed small manufacturing here in the US, simply because to 
comply with the restrictive laws here is too expensive to remain competitive.

Many see high-cost government regulation as being benign, a help to the poor 
people. I see it differently. A 16 year-old kid could get real world experience 
de-tasseling corn or planting tomatoes

[apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-15 Thread Mike Arvay
I'm curious on what the group thinks about this proposed amendment to 
the U.S. Fruit and Vegetable Regulation which will allow the import of 
apples into the U.S. from China.


I don't want this to become a All things from China are bad. thread.  
But I can see both negative and positive possibilities on allowing 
this.  They do recommend additional measures and actions other than the 
standard Port of Entry Inspection.


http://www.regulations.gov/?utm_source=hs_emailutm_medium=emailutm_content=13804591_hsenc=p2ANqtz--B9po2Wh9EOEarH4oSyBng8hr9QeyW3LJQbTqn5DyDzYxmuMr2ciJZaLS1t7JjLaavRgsui8ZQ9El8DY6ATo7HsWEkbg_hsmi=13804591#!documentDetail;D=APHIS-2014-0003-0001

Thanks.

Mike Arvay
Small Grower in Central Indiana.
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Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-15 Thread dmnorton
When the demand for apples in the United States is greater than the supply 
available in the United States, then I have no problem with imports from China 
or elsewhere..as long as we have a knowledge of how the fruit is grown and 
how pest control is administered.  But I cannot see importing from China if we 
have an ample supply..we should support our own growers before supporting 
those from around the world.  

Dennis Norton
IPM Specialist/Certified Nurseryman
Royal Oak Farm Orchard
15908 Hebron Rd.
Harvard, IL 60033-9357
Office (815) 648-4467
Mobile (815) 228-2174
Fax (609) 228-2174
http://www.royaloakfarmorchard.com
http://www.royaloakfarmorchard.blogspot.com
  - Original Message - 
  From: Ginda Fisher 
  To: Apple-crop discussion list ; Mike Arvay 
  Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 9:58 AM
  Subject: Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?


  Speaking as an apple consumer, I have concerns about China driving down 
price, and therefore quality, of U.S. grown fruit. But I tend to avoid food and 
children's toys that come out of China.

  (Like everyone else, most of my clothes and electronics have Chinese 
components. And I've had no problems with that.)
  -- 
  Typed with Swype. Who knows what I meant to say?


  On August 15, 2014 10:26:03 AM EDT, Mike Arvay 
greenap...@deercreekorchard.com wrote:
I'm curious on what the group thinks about this proposed amendment to the U.S. 
Fruit and Vegetable Regulation which will allow the import of apples into the 
U.S. from China.I don't want this to become a All things from China are bad. 
thread.  But I can see both negative and positive possibilities on allowing 
this.  They do recommend additional measures and actions other than the 
standard Port of Entry 
Inspection.http://www.regulations.gov/?utm_source=hs_emailutm_medium=emailutm_content=13804591_hsenc=p2ANqtz--B9po2Wh9EOEarH4oSyBng8hr9QeyW3LJQbTqn5DyDzYxmuMr2ciJZaLS1t7JjLaavRgsui8ZQ9El8DY6ATo7HsWEkbg_hsmi=13804591#!documentDetail;D=APHIS-2014-0003-0001Thanks.Mike
 ArvaySmall Grower in Central 
Indiana.apple-crop
 mailing 
listapple-crop@virtualorchard.nethttp://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop

--


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Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-15 Thread Geraldine Warner
For more information, see the article on the Good Fruit Grower Web site:

http://www.goodfruit.com/usda-issues-rule-to-allow-imports-of-apples-from-china/


On Aug 15, 2014, at 8:13 AM, dmnor...@royaloakfarmorchard.com wrote:

 When the demand for apples in the United States is greater than the supply 
 available in the United States, then I have no problem with imports from 
 China or elsewhere..as long as we have a knowledge of how the fruit is 
 grown and how pest control is administered.  But I cannot see importing from 
 China if we have an ample supply..we should support our own growers 
 before supporting those from around the world. 
  
 Dennis Norton
 IPM Specialist/Certified Nurseryman
 Royal Oak Farm Orchard
 15908 Hebron Rd.
 Harvard, IL 60033-9357
 Office (815) 648-4467
 Mobile (815) 228-2174
 Fax (609) 228-2174
 http://www.royaloakfarmorchard.com
 http://www.royaloakfarmorchard.blogspot.com
 - Original Message -
 From: Ginda Fisher
 To: Apple-crop discussion list ; Mike Arvay
 Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 9:58 AM
 Subject: Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?
 
 Speaking as an apple consumer, I have concerns about China driving down 
 price, and therefore quality, of U.S. grown fruit. But I tend to avoid food 
 and children's toys that come out of China.
 
 (Like everyone else, most of my clothes and electronics have Chinese 
 components. And I've had no problems with that.)
 -- 
 Typed with Swype. Who knows what I meant to say?
 
 On August 15, 2014 10:26:03 AM EDT, Mike Arvay 
 greenap...@deercreekorchard.com wrote:
 I'm curious on what the group thinks about this proposed amendment to 
 the U.S. Fruit and Vegetable Regulation which will allow the import of 
 apples into the U.S. from China.
 
 I don't want this to become a All things from China are bad. thread.  
 But I can see both negative and positive possibilities on allowing 
 this.  They do recommend additional measures and actions other than the 
 standard Port of Entry Inspection.
 
 http://www.regulations.gov/?utm_source=hs_emailutm_medium=emailutm_content=13804591_hsenc=p2ANqtz--B9po2Wh9EOEarH4oSyBng8hr9QeyW3LJQbTqn5DyDzYxmuMr2ciJZaLS1t7JjLaavRgsui8ZQ9El8DY6ATo7HsWEkbg_hsmi=13804591#!documentDetail;D=APHIS-2014-0003-0001
 
 Thanks.
 
 Mike Arvay
 Small Grower in Central Indiana.
 
 apple-crop mailing list
 apple-crop@virtualorchard.net
 http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop
 
 
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Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-15 Thread Hugh Thomas
There is a lot of labor involved with the production of apples. For US
growers to be competitive, this implies that the price of labor will have
to fall here in the US or the cost of labor in China will need to rise.
(not likely) Another factor is the cost of fumigation.(?) Shipping is not a
real factor as they will ship directly to the West Coast for less than 5
cents per pound. I Owned a pottery back in the 80's, and when China
starting shipping to the US, the wholesale prices of their pottery was
about what I had to pay for the raw ingredients. It was truly shocking.
China is the largest grower of apples, outproducing the US by 9 fold. Also,
they are great farmers and the apple is a native tree for them. This is big
trouble for the US grower.


On Fri, Aug 15, 2014 at 8:41 AM, Fleming, William w...@montana.edu wrote:

 To me it just seems strange that we would allow importing apples from any
 country when we depend on exports ourselves to market the excess amount of
 fruit we produce.
 Maybe I'm just looking at it with too much common sense.
 Then again many times in trade agreements allowing an import of a product
 is traded in exchange for export of another. Who knows, we might be trading
 apples for flip-flops.
 Doesn't benefit the apple grower but may benefit an entirely different
 industry, and a politician's campaign contributors.

 Bill Fleming
 Montana State University
 Western Ag Research Center
 580 Quast Lane
 Corvallis, MT 59828

 -Original Message-
 From: apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net [mailto:
 apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net] On Behalf Of Mike Arvay
 Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 8:26 AM
 To: Apple-crop discussion list
 Subject: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

 I'm curious on what the group thinks about this proposed amendment to the
 U.S. Fruit and Vegetable Regulation which will allow the import of apples
 into the U.S. from China.

 I don't want this to become a All things from China are bad. thread.
 But I can see both negative and positive possibilities on allowing this.
 They do recommend additional measures and actions other than the standard
 Port of Entry Inspection.


 http://www.regulations.gov/?utm_source=hs_emailutm_medium=emailutm_content=13804591_hsenc=p2ANqtz--B9po2Wh9EOEarH4oSyBng8hr9QeyW3LJQbTqn5DyDzYxmuMr2ciJZaLS1t7JjLaavRgsui8ZQ9El8DY6ATo7HsWEkbg_hsmi=13804591#!documentDetail;D=APHIS-2014-0003-0001

 Thanks.

 Mike Arvay
 Small Grower in Central Indiana.
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Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-15 Thread Peter J. Jentsch
China is the world’s largest consumer of fruits and vegetables, with a growing 
appetite for high-quality produce. China is also an expanding import market 
(mostly fresh fruits and, to a lesser extent, processed products). The value of 
China’s produce imports increased sevenfold between 1992 and 2001, making it 
one of the world’s fastest growing import markets. (Global Trade Patterns in 
Fruits and Vegetables Economic Research Service/USDA).

Yet China is producing almost half of world total apple production, increasing 
from 33,263,000; 35,985,000 and 37,000,000 metric tonnes from 2010, 2011 and 
2012 respectively while increasing world exports by 10% between 2000 to 2006. 
(Source: World Markets and Trade, US Department of Agriculture, Foreign 
Agricultural Service, May 2007). However, 10%; volume in terms of of world 
export is only 3% of their China's total production!!!

The US has been increasing their shipments of high volume fresh apple to China. 
We will likely continue increase of apple exports until China has ramped up 
their volume and quality of production. Its been my understanding that even the 
Chinese people prefer US apple due to food safety concerns.

Western US apple trade to China and world markets may be well for Eastern 
growers as it will likely reduce the shipments of Washington State apples to 
eastern markets and increase supply for locally grown fruit?

I would favor increased tree fruit trade with China under competitive trade 
conditions based on standardized production practices. As it now stands, the 
regulations do not require the use of production practice guidelines to the 
standards which U.S growers need to abide, creating a competitive disadvantage 
for the US tree fruit producer. Pest management practices, worker protection 
standards and child labor laws shouldnbsp; be instituted within the guidelines 
of production practices, certified by US inspection of farms and facilities, 
just as we have here in the US. Its likely that MRL standards will need to be 
assessed and met, yet there's no mention of MRL's in the regulation. The 
emphasis in the bill on phytosanitation for oriental fruit moth is outdated and 
concerns for newer invasive species should receive a hard review (too late for 
BMSB and SWD invasion over the pst 15 years, having caused millions of $$ in 
production and research loss).


That said, China has not been known for their recent history of protecting 
human rights, product quality or safety standards and should be pressured into 
compliance by world markets to 'come clean'.


Peter


The best way out is always through - Robert Frost”

Peter J. Jentsch
Hudson Valley Laboratory Superintendent
Senior Extension Associate - Entomology
Department of Entomology, Cornell University
Hudson Valley Research Lab
P.O. Box 727, 3357 Rt. 9W
Highland, NY 12528

Office: 845-691-7151
Cell: 845-417-7465
FAX: 845-691-2719

E-mail: p...@cornell.edu
http://blogs.cornell.edu/jentsch/

From: apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net 
apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net on behalf of Ginda Fisher 
l...@ginda.us
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 10:58 AM
To: Apple-crop discussion list; Mike Arvay
Subject: Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

Speaking as an apple consumer, I have concerns about China driving down price, 
and therefore quality, of U.S. grown fruit. But I tend to avoid food and 
children's toys that come out of China.

(Like everyone else, most of my clothes and electronics have Chinese 
components. And I've had no problems with that.)
--
Typed with Swype. Who knows what I meant to say?

On August 15, 2014 10:26:03 AM EDT, Mike Arvay 
greenap...@deercreekorchard.com wrote:

I'm curious on what the group thinks about this proposed amendment to
the U.S. Fruit and Vegetable Regulation which will allow the import of
apples into the U.S. from China.

I don't want this to become a All things from China are bad. thread.
But I can see both negative and positive possibilities on allowing
this.  They do recommend additional measures and actions other than the
standard Port of Entry Inspection.

http://www.regulations.gov/?utm_source=hs_emailutm_medium=emailutm_content=13804591_hsenc=p2ANqtz--B9po2Wh9EOEarH4oSyBng8hr9QeyW3LJQbTqn5DyDzYxmuMr2ciJZaLS1t7JjLaavRgsui8ZQ9El8DY6ATo7HsWEkbg_hsmi=13804591#!documentDetail;D=APHIS-2014-0003-0001

Thanks.

Mike Arvay
Small Grower in Central Indiana.


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Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-15 Thread Steven Bibula
Well said Peter.  Yet enforcement of practices requires transparency,
regulatory monitoring and political will that are all lacking with respect
to the US' premier competitor for prominence on the world stage as well as
our second largest creditor (second only to the Federal Reserve Bank I
think?).

 

A plus: Chinese apples in the US market will result in a net increased
demand for my U-Pick apples.

 

Steven Bibula

Plowshares Community Farm

Gorham ME

From: apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net
[mailto:apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net] On Behalf Of Peter J. Jentsch
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 12:53 PM
To: Apple-crop discussion list
Subject: Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

 

China is the world's largest consumer of fruits and vegetables, with a
growing appetite for high-quality produce. China is also an expanding import
market (mostly fresh fruits and, to a lesser extent, processed products).
The value of China's produce imports increased sevenfold between 1992 and
2001, making it one of the world's fastest growing import markets. (Global
Trade Patterns in Fruits and Vegetables Economic Research Service/USDA).

Yet China is producing almost half of world total apple production,
increasing from 33,263,000; 35,985,000 and 37,000,000 metric tonnes from
2010, 2011 and 2012 respectively while increasing world exports by 10%
between 2000 to 2006. (Source: World Markets and Trade, US Department of
Agriculture, Foreign Agricultural Service, May 2007). However, 10%; volume
in terms of of world export is only 3% of their China's total production!!!

The US has been increasing their shipments of high volume fresh apple to
China. We will likely continue increase of apple exports until China has
ramped up their volume and quality of production. Its been my understanding
that even the Chinese people prefer US apple due to food safety concerns.

Western US apple trade to China and world markets may be well for Eastern
growers as it will likely reduce the shipments of Washington State apples to
eastern markets and increase supply for locally grown fruit?

I would favor increased tree fruit trade with China under competitive trade
conditions based on standardized production practices. As it now stands, the
regulations do not require the use of production practice guidelines to the
standards which U.S growers need to abide, creating a competitive
disadvantage for the US tree fruit producer. Pest management practices,
worker protection standards and child labor laws shouldnbsp; be instituted
within the guidelines of production practices, certified by US inspection of
farms and facilities, just as we have here in the US. Its likely that MRL
standards will need to be assessed and met, yet there's no mention of MRL's
in the regulation. The emphasis in the bill on phytosanitation for oriental
fruit moth is outdated and concerns for newer invasive species should
receive a hard review (too late for BMSB and SWD invasion over the pst 15
years, having caused millions of $$ in production and research loss). 

 

That said, China has not been known for their recent history of protecting
human rights, product quality or safety standards and should be pressured
into compliance by world markets to 'come clean'. 

 

Peter 

 

The best way out is always through - Robert Frost

Peter J. Jentsch
Hudson Valley Laboratory Superintendent 
Senior Extension Associate - Entomology
Department of Entomology, Cornell University
Hudson Valley Research Lab
P.O. Box 727, 3357 Rt. 9W
Highland, NY 12528

Office: 845-691-7151
Cell: 845-417-7465
FAX: 845-691-2719

E-mail: p...@cornell.edu
http://blogs.cornell.edu/jentsch/

  _  

From: apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net
apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net on behalf of Ginda Fisher
l...@ginda.us
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 10:58 AM
To: Apple-crop discussion list; Mike Arvay
Subject: Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China? 

 

Speaking as an apple consumer, I have concerns about China driving down
price, and therefore quality, of U.S. grown fruit. But I tend to avoid food
and children's toys that come out of China.

(Like everyone else, most of my clothes and electronics have Chinese
components. And I've had no problems with that.)
-- 
Typed with Swype. Who knows what I meant to say?

On August 15, 2014 10:26:03 AM EDT, Mike Arvay
greenap...@deercreekorchard.com wrote: 

I'm curious on what the group thinks about this proposed amendment to 
the U.S. Fruit and Vegetable Regulation which will allow the import of 
apples into the U.S. from China.

I don't want this to become a All things from China are bad. thread.  
But I can see both negative and positive possibilities on allowing 
this.  They do recommend additional measures and actions other than the 
standard Port of Entry Inspection.

http://www.regulations.gov/?utm_source=hs_email
http://www.regulations.gov/?utm_source=hs_emailutm_medium=emailutm_conten
t=13804591_hsenc=p2ANqtz--B9po2Wh9EOEarH4oSyBng8hr9QeyW3LJQbTqn5DyDzYxmuMr2

Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-15 Thread Hugh Thomas
The only Western country without a minimum wage is Switzerland. The
unemployment rate there is 3%. A huge problem here in the US is that we pay
people not to work (unemployment checks) and have a minimum wage. If the
growers in China were forced to pay our wage rates, then there would be
little problems with competition from them. However, this will never
happen.

For the US: 1. Get rid of minimum wage laws. 2. Reform the tort laws where
law suits are at a minimum, and the loser must pay all court costs and
attorney's fees. (Can you imagine suing your employer in China?) 3.
Terminate all unemployment payments. In just a few weeks, a grower could
hire workers dirt cheap. The market would then self correct. Otherwise, the
restrictive regulations here in the US will put growers out of business.
The problem is not China's cheap products, but the Federal and states
government's expensive regulations. This is a no-brainer.


On Fri, Aug 15, 2014 at 12:14 PM, Steven Bibula sbib...@maine.rr.com
wrote:

 Well said Peter.  Yet enforcement of practices requires transparency,
 regulatory monitoring and political will that are all lacking with respect
 to the US’ premier competitor for prominence on the world stage as well as
 our second largest creditor (second only to the Federal Reserve Bank I
 think?).



 A plus: Chinese apples in the US market will result in a net increased
 demand for my U-Pick apples.



 Steven Bibula

 Plowshares Community Farm

 Gorham ME

 *From:* apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net [mailto:
 apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net] *On Behalf Of *Peter J. Jentsch
 *Sent:* Friday, August 15, 2014 12:53 PM
 *To:* Apple-crop discussion list

 *Subject:* Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?



 China is the world’s largest consumer of fruits and vegetables, with a
 growing appetite for high-quality produce. China is also an expanding
 import market (mostly fresh fruits and, to a lesser extent, processed
 products). The value of China’s produce imports increased sevenfold between
 1992 and 2001, making it one of the world’s fastest growing import markets.
 (Global Trade Patterns in Fruits and Vegetables Economic Research
 Service/USDA).

 Yet China is producing almost half of world total apple production,
 increasing from 33,263,000; 35,985,000 and 37,000,000 metric tonnes from
 2010, 2011 and 2012 respectively while increasing world exports by 10%
 between 2000 to 2006. (Source: World Markets and Trade, US Department of
 Agriculture, Foreign Agricultural Service, May 2007). However, 10%; volume
 in terms of of world export is only 3% of their China's total production!!!

 The US has been increasing their shipments of high volume fresh apple to
 China. We will likely continue increase of apple exports until China has
 ramped up their volume and quality of production. Its been my understanding
 that even the Chinese people prefer US apple due to food safety concerns.

 Western US apple trade to China and world markets may be well for Eastern
 growers as it will likely reduce the shipments of Washington State apples
 to eastern markets and increase supply for locally grown fruit?

 I would favor increased tree fruit trade with China under competitive
 trade conditions based on standardized production practices. As it now
 stands, the regulations do not require the use of production practice
 guidelines to the standards which U.S growers need to abide, creating a
 competitive disadvantage for the US tree fruit producer. Pest management
 practices, worker protection standards and child labor laws shouldnbsp; be
 instituted within the guidelines of production practices, certified by US
 inspection of farms and facilities, just as we have here in the US. Its
 likely that MRL standards will need to be assessed and met, yet there's no
 mention of MRL's in the regulation. The emphasis in the bill on
 phytosanitation for oriental fruit moth is outdated and concerns for newer
 invasive species should receive a hard review (too late for BMSB and SWD
 invasion over the pst 15 years, having caused millions of $$ in production
 and research loss).



 That said, China has not been known for their recent history of protecting
 human rights, product quality or safety standards and should be pressured
 into compliance by world markets to 'come clean'.



 Peter



 The best way out is always through - Robert Frost”

 Peter J. Jentsch
 Hudson Valley Laboratory Superintendent
 Senior Extension Associate - Entomology
 Department of Entomology, Cornell University
 Hudson Valley Research Lab
 P.O. Box 727, 3357 Rt. 9W
 Highland, NY 12528

 Office: 845-691-7151
 Cell: 845-417-7465
 FAX: 845-691-2719

 E-mail: p...@cornell.edu
 http://blogs.cornell.edu/jentsch/
 --

 *From:* apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net 
 apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net on behalf of Ginda Fisher 
 l...@ginda.us
 *Sent:* Friday, August 15, 2014 10:58 AM
 *To:* Apple-crop discussion list; Mike Arvay
 *Subject

Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-15 Thread John Bruguiere
As long as China holds 15% or more of the US dept, the govt can't really 
tell China anything. I don't like importing anything that would harm 
American production(furniture, steel, etc.).
A good businessman will diversify and change to stay ahead of the curve. 
A poor decision would be to keep planting trees in the US when we are at 
a competitive disadvantage with China, Chile and Argentina etc.
If we have more supply than demand, simply decrease supply and prices 
will rise.

7th generation apple grower
John
On 8/15/2014 10:26 AM, Mike Arvay wrote:
I'm curious on what the group thinks about this proposed amendment to 
the U.S. Fruit and Vegetable Regulation which will allow the import of 
apples into the U.S. from China.


I don't want this to become a All things from China are bad. 
thread.  But I can see both negative and positive possibilities on 
allowing this.  They do recommend additional measures and actions 
other than the standard Port of Entry Inspection.


http://www.regulations.gov/?utm_source=hs_emailutm_medium=emailutm_content=13804591_hsenc=p2ANqtz--, 
B9po2Wh9EOEarH4oSyBng8hr9QeyW3LJQbTqn5DyDzYxmuMr2ciJZaLS1t7JjLaavRgsui8ZQ9El8DY6ATo7HsWEkbg_hsmi=13804591#!documentDetail;D=APHIS-2014-0003-0001 



Thanks.

Mike Arvay
Small Grower in Central Indiana.
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--
*
Dickie Bros. Orchard
www.DickieBros.com
Ph: (434) 277-5516*
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Re: [apple-crop] Apples From China?

2014-08-15 Thread David A. Rosenberger
So far as I know, there is no political quid pro quo for decisions on what 
products can be imported into the US or exported to other countries, and 
scientific concerns about importation of pests are given serious consideration. 
 Nevertheless, Bill’s suggestion about trading apples for flip-flops hints at 
some factors that may ultimately impact negotiator positioning.  In this case, 
perhaps we should substitute “soybeans” for flip-flops.  Has anyone checked 
recently to see the value of soybeans and other ag exports from the US to 
China? And then of  course, we wouldn’t want to  anger China into massive 
selling of the US securities that they have purchased over the past several 
decades while we spent our wealth on meaningless wars. Thus, we are 
inextricably linked in a world-wide economy that at times runs rough-shod over 
individual winners and losers.  In many cases, it is almost impossible to 
predict who those winners and losers will be as governments tug on the economic 
and political strings that interconnect countries.

Reducing or eliminating minimum wage laws and unemployment insurance would not 
and will not solve any apple farmer problems related to US competitive 
capabilities in the world market. It would only increase the inequities and 
distancing of haves and have-nots in our county, inequities that ultimately 
contributed to the riots in major cities in the 1960’s and that have 
contributed to current problems in Fergusson, MO.  Those who ignore history 
are doomed to repeat it.”  It is very difficult to have a vibrant economy in 
the midst of anarchy. Increasing the gap between rich and poor while at the 
same time burning the bridges that allow social progress for those born into 
poverty will almost certainly increase the the probability of lawlessness among 
those without any hope for the future. Apple growers who think that they could 
live on the current minimum wage should try it for a year, recognizing of 
course that one must start the experiment without any housing, without a car, 
and with no credit rating.

If you really believe that the free markets (i.e., no minimum wage, no 
unemployment benefits) will solve our problems consider this:  We already have 
a health care system that ranks somewhere around 29th when compared with those 
of other nations (and that was true before Obamacare was instituted).  Yet we 
pay a much higher price for our healthcare than Canada and the European 
countries that have better health care systems than we do, a fact that rather 
undermines the case that everything works fine if the government allows the 
free market (i.e., insurance and pharmaceutical companies and tort lawyers) to 
have their own way.  


Dave Rosenberger, Professor Emeritus
Dept. of Plant Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology
Cornell’s Hudson Valley Lab, P.O. Box 727, Highland, NY 12528
   Office:  845-691-7231Cell: 845-594-3060
http://blogs.cornell.edu/plantpathhvl/blog-2014/


On Aug 15, 2014, at 11:41 AM, Fleming, William w...@montana.edu wrote:

 To me it just seems strange that we would allow importing apples from any 
 country when we depend on exports ourselves to market the excess amount of 
 fruit we produce.
 Maybe I'm just looking at it with too much common sense.
 Then again many times in trade agreements allowing an import of a product is 
 traded in exchange for export of another. Who knows, we might be trading 
 apples for flip-flops.
 Doesn't benefit the apple grower but may benefit an entirely different 
 industry, and a politician's campaign contributors.
 
 Bill Fleming
 Montana State University
 Western Ag Research Center
 580 Quast Lane
 Corvallis, MT 59828
 
 -Original Message-
 From: apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net 
 [mailto:apple-crop-boun...@virtualorchard.net] On Behalf Of Mike Arvay
 Sent: Friday, August 15, 2014 8:26 AM
 To: Apple-crop discussion list
 Subject: [apple-crop] Apples From China?
 
 I'm curious on what the group thinks about this proposed amendment to the 
 U.S. Fruit and Vegetable Regulation which will allow the import of apples 
 into the U.S. from China.
 
 I don't want this to become a All things from China are bad. thread.  
 But I can see both negative and positive possibilities on allowing this.  
 They do recommend additional measures and actions other than the standard 
 Port of Entry Inspection.
 
 http://www.regulations.gov/?utm_source=hs_emailutm_medium=emailutm_content=13804591_hsenc=p2ANqtz--B9po2Wh9EOEarH4oSyBng8hr9QeyW3LJQbTqn5DyDzYxmuMr2ciJZaLS1t7JjLaavRgsui8ZQ9El8DY6ATo7HsWEkbg_hsmi=13804591#!documentDetail;D=APHIS-2014-0003-0001
 
 Thanks.
 
 Mike Arvay
 Small Grower in Central Indiana.
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