Showing posts with label free market rants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free market rants. Show all posts

Monday, January 13, 2014

Your list is missing something

A massive percentage of the U.S. population believes that without government intervention, children would be starving in the streets, the poor would have no electricity, and a huge number of sick people would be sent home to die. 

I'm not one of those people.  I believe that government creates more poverty than it eliminates.

Do you believe that a huge, intrusive government is necessary to keep people from falling into hunger, want and despair?  

Then why didn't you put  The Department Of Health And Human Services on your list? 

The mission of the Department of Health and Human Services is to help provide the building blocks that Americans need to live healthy, successful lives.  We fulfill that mission every day by providing millions of children, families, and seniors with access to high-quality health care, by helping people find jobs and parents find affordable child care, by keeping the food on Americans’ shelves safe and infectious diseases at bay, and by pushing the boundaries of how we diagnose and treat disease.

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is the United States government’s principal agency for protecting the health of all Americans and providing essential human services, especially for those who are least able to help themselves. HHS is headed by the Secretary who is the chief managing officer for our family of agencies, including 11 operating divisions, 10 regional offices, as well as the Office of the Secretary.

I know this is a tough question.  Why didn't you put HHS on your list? 

The answer goes something like this....   We all like to do some preening and posturing, right?  No one has ever lost many friends or lost social standing by standing up for poor people.  I like standing up for poor people, but Libertarians stand up for them in a different way than most. 

You didn't have Uncle Sam's poverty program on your list for the same reason you don't have Reverend Moon's anti-poverty program on your list. 

You don't want to see your money wasted. 

You know it's true. 

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Rice Shortage Caused by Rising Cost of Biofuel

http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/chi-rice-shortage-080423-ht,0,89750.story

Rice shortage caused by rising cost of biofuel

SINGAPORE - Developed nations should stop paying agricultural subsidies to encourage biofuel production because the payments are making staple foods more expensive, the Asian Development Bank said Monday.Biofuels should also be re-examined by governments around the world as it is increasingly unclear how environmentally friendly they are, ADB Managing Director General Rajat Nag said in an interview with The Associated Press.

The production of biofuel leads to forests being destroyed and reduced land area for growing crops for food, he said."We feel that the developed countries should seriously rethink the whole issue of biofuel, particularly the biofuel subsidies," Nag said. "Giving subsidies for biofuels ... basically acts as an implicit tax on staple foods."Paying farmers to grow oilseed and other crops to produce biofuels means they grow fewer food crops, resulting in higher prices for such staples as palm oil and corn.

Nag did not give examples, but countries that subsidize biofuel include the U.S., the world's largest producer of ethanol, which is made mostly from corn and other grain crops. The country's farm subsidy programs include payments for ethanol production."We believe it is more important to let the developed country farmers decide on what they will plant, based on the relative prices, based on the international prices, but not subsidized prices," he said.

Surging food prices, stoked by rising fuel costs that have increased production and transport costs, have triggered protests around the world in recent weeks. Riots have erupted over food shortages in the Caribbean and Africa and hunger is approaching crisis stage in parts of Asia.Nag said rising food prices will be top on the agenda of the ADB's annual board of governors meeting in Madrid next week.He urged governments faced with rising food prices not to impose price caps or export bans, as the measures could prove counterproductive.

Price controls are disincentives for farmers amid the rising costs, he said."The cost of production is going up, so the obvious, rational reaction (to price caps) of the farmer is to reduce planting, which is exactly the opposite of what we want. We want production to increase, not decrease," he said.Nag said governments should instead consider targeted cash income transfers to the poor. The Manila-based bank was ready to provide loans to governments to help ease the situation, he said, but added that no country has made any specific requests yet.

"If the governments go for the targeted income support, obviously this will add to the fiscal burden of the governments, so ADB will be very responsive and willing to consider budget support for the government, and providing program loans," he said.In Asia, Nag said, the supply of rice to the region remained adequate even though stocks have slipped to their lowest in decades."We want to get the focus away from being dramatized or an overreaction to the supply situation. It is tight, no doubt about it," he said.

"But it is not a situation when rice is not available in the region as a whole."Nag said, however, that the rapid increase in the price of rice had a "very serious impact" on the region's poor, who spend a large proportion of their income on food."The prices have increased very dramatically, almost three times in the last one year and almost twice in the last three months," he said.

Nag said the hardest hit by rising food prices in the Asia Pacific include 600 million people who survive on a dollar a day or less, and about the same number who live on just above a dollar -- making up a group of about 1.2 billion who are vulnerable.The region's poor usually spend about half of their budgets on food, but recent increases have pushed that proportion to about 80 percent in some parts of South Asia, he said.

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