—Lancaster Farming. Saturday. August 8.1970 4 On Squeezing Out Farm Prosperity A theme long popular with national ag ricultural officials holds that greater pros- is just around the corner for Ameri can farmers. J. Phil Campbell. U.S. Under Secretary of Agriculture, summed it up in a speech in Hampton. S.C. June 27 as follows: “In the present decade U.S. population is projected to increase from 205 million to about 230 million. Consumer income after taxes is expected to double, rising from 5630 billion last year to $1,260 billion by 1980. “This combination of more people with more income means increased demand for farm products. And when we introduce in to the equation a continued, though slower, decline in the number of commercial farm ers, the return per farm is projected to rise sharply.” It’s logical. It sounds good. But the rosy picture may or may not turn out to represent reality for the indivi dual farmer. Fewer Farmers Actually. e\er since World War 11. the American tarmer has been experiencing a steadily worsening price-cost squeeze. Each year, tens of thousands of those farmers east able to meet the growing squeeze nave been forced off the farm. This squeeze is the squeeze between steadily rising costs for equipment and sup -phes on the one hand and relatively stable prices for the products the farmer pro duces on the other. Equally se\ere has been the growing cost of living, which means the farmer must make more profit each y ear to main tain the same standard of living. Continuing Squeeze What is to stop this squeeze from con tinuing into the next decade? Will the cost of equipment and supplies quit going up? Probably not, they actually may go up faster, and more costly inputs may be necessary to remain competitive Will the prices the farmer receives go up fast enough to off-set these increasing costs? Probably not, unless farmers simply quit producing so much and force the con sumer to bid up the prices of the av ailable produce. In the Age of Consumerism, when farm ers make up six per cent of the population and the political strength of the nation is shifting increasingly to the metropolitan centers and their suburbs, can we expect the nation to support artifically inflated food prices? Probably we can, but only to a limited extent, like at the present. Present programs and policies m some respects help keep prices to the faimer high, but their o\erall impact may be ac tually to concentrate farm ownership into fewer hands, thereby increasing the price cost squeeze for the great majority of smail farmers. \ oluntary Control The greatest hope for maintaining high prices for rarm products may be througn voluntary production control programs by farmers through their farm organizations This approach is being attempted by the egg industry at the present time As control of the egg industry becomes concentrated in fewer hands, such an approach becomes increasingly possible. But the swtne industry also is in the midst of a major expansion. The swine in dustry and most other major farm income LANCASTER FARMING Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly P. 0 Box 266 - Lititz. Pa. 17543 Office 22 E Main St Lititz, Pa 17543 Phone Lancastei 394-3047 or Lititz 626 2191 Robert G Campbell Advertising Director Zane Wilson Managing Editoi Subscription puce S 2 per yeai in Lancaster County S 3 elsewhere Established November 4,1955 Publisher e\en Satuidaybc Lancaster Farming Lititz Pa Second Class Postage paid at Lititz Pa 17543 Member of Nev. maper Farm Editors Assn Pa. Newspaper Publishers Association, and National Newspaper Association production areas arc highly diversified with thousands or millions of small producers ac counting for most of the market volume, Such areas arc a long, long way from any meaningful production control, other than the long-standing fear of market busts that occur when production gets out of control. Milk Industry Approach Another possibility for control appears to be the milk industry approach to main taining relatively high milk prices ap parently a joint venture by farmers, milk firms of various types and the government. This approach involves both price and pro duction controls. But the milk industry lends itself to such controls more readily than most other farm enterprises because of the huge capi tal investments involved and highly com plex marketing structure both of which discourage ready movement of farmers in and out of the milk business. A major question mark which hangs o\er the milk industry control program is continuing decline in per capita milk con sumption. While per capita beef and poultry consumption ha\e mo\ed steadily upward, per capita milk consumption has declined steadily. At some point, it would appear, the decline of consumption will have to be stop ped There are some indications that the milk industry is in the early stages of gearing up to challenge Coke and the other be\erages which are making inroads into the milk market. Until milk meets the chal lenge to its markets, however, w r e don’t see how the milk system, e\en though highly successful for dairymen now, can become a model for U.S. agriculture. While the route of U S. agriculture since World War II toward more production and fewer farmers has not been completely satisfactory, it offers more for the farmer and the nation than a route tow ard decreas ed production and loss of markets. Overall, w e see the decade of the 70's as a continuation of the decade of the 60’s in presenting a continuing cost-price squeeze for farmers. The 70’s actually could be harder for many farmers to cope with, because the squeeze will continue in spite of larger farming units imolving much greater in puts of machinery and capital. Internationally, many previously unde veloped countries are beginning to develop substantial agricultural economies. The U S. has continually upgraded its output per acre and per man hour through improved seed, livestock, automation and know-how 7 . While the U S undoubtedly will continue to compete in many areas of the international faim economy, the trends .vould indicate tnat loreign competition is one mure area that will escalate the price cost squeeze. Pinching the Av erage Guy R. W. Johanns wrote as follows recent ly in a national publication: "How good a farmer are jou 7 What are your chances of being around 10 years from now 7 If vou think you're doing an average job, don’t feel too smug. One definition of an average farmer is. ‘Someone who'll be out of busi ness 10 years from now.’ “One out of two farmers will be gone, and that includes the one who’s just aver age. But many a farmer doesn't have any thing to worry about; he doesn’t worry be cause he doesn’t know where he stands good, bad, or indifferent! If he knew, he might worry and do something instead of waiting to have something done to him." In the 70’s, the pressures of higher costs of living will continue. Land prices and taxes probably will continue to rise. In creasingly higher paid non-farm jobs will continue to compete for farm labor and marginally successful farmers. Altogether, this means that the pres sures which weeded out millions of farm ers since World War II will continue in the 70‘s It’s by no means an impossible em iron ment for the farmer who knows what he s doing and does it But there will be continu ally less margin for error. ’* NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent To I so Horizontal Silos Tne corn crop looks like an other big one with all present storage facilities filled to capa city. Livestock producers whi aie getting the most fiom their corn by making it into silage, and aho may be shoit of per manent silo stoiagc, shold con nv.r.ent silo storage should con- Many tons of good silage may be made with these methods if the mate ial is chopped fine, packed tightly and the air sealed out Many producers will transfer the silage from the temporary stor age into the up; ight silo for auto matic feeding early. next spring To Make Roof Repairs If? quite easy to forget about lepauing a leaking joof in diy weathei because you don’t need i; When it lams you should ha\e made the lepair but it’s too wd to do it Therefore, late summer or eaily fall is a good THE FLOOD Lesson for August 9, 1970 Bodcaraund Scripture* Genesis 6 through 9, Matthew 74 37-39 2 Peter 2 4-10 a. Devetienel Reading 2 Peter 2 4 10, The story of the great flood that covered the earth because of the sin of mankind is not limited to the saga of Noah in Genesis, but is found in the an cient literatures and oral tradi -» of * lies throughout the world. There is hardly a pait of the world where there are not leg ends of a uni\er sal flood. In 1873 George Smith of the But ish Museum dis- co\cred and pub lished a ‘‘Chal- Rev. AUhouse dean Account of the Deluge,” which had been translated from twelve tablets that had been found in the li brary of the Babylonian luler, Ashurbanipal (668 626’ B C.) This account of a great flood has come to be known to us as the “Gilgamesh Epic.” “Tell no one” The legend is the story of Gil gamesh, who, mourning the death of his friend, Enkidu, makes a long, hazardous journey to his ancestor, Utnapishtim, to learn the secret of eternal life. He tells Gilgamesh that long ago when the gods decided to destroy the earth, one of them, Ea, com manded Utnapishtim to build a ship in order to survive the great flood to come. He was not to warn his fellow citizens in any way. For six days and nights, Utna pishtim, his family, and all the other living beings he could find, rode out the terrible storm. On the seventh day it ceased and eventually the boat came to rest upon a mountaintop. Disembark ing at last, Utnapishtim, to show his gratitude, offered a sacrifice which pleased the gods. The story is remarkably like that of Noah; yet there are im portant differences that make the Genesis saga greatly superior. time to get the roof in go< shape for fall and winter rains. Many roof problems show up as leakage at chimneys, roof val leys, or vent pipes. In other cases wind stoi ms may have loosened shingles or sections of i oofing. The suggestion is to get the loof fixed before cold wea ther arrives. To Manage Sorghum Hybrids The growth on Sudan grass and the sudan-sorghum hybrids this summer has been enormous be cause of the wet weathei. If these crops have gotten ahead of the herd, they may be made into silage or hay, better into silage because of their coaiseness The new growth aftei clipping should be allowed to reach 18 inches foi the sudan glass and 24 inches for the sudan sorghum hybrids. To graze or gieen-cnop them earlier is usky due to the pos sible piussic acid content For one thing, there is a sense of purpose in the Noah story: the earth is to be destroyed, not at the whim of the gods as in the “G” epic, but because of the sin fulness of men. This is a truth which men must not ignore even today. When people revolt against God, when they set themselves against his universal laws, there is usually a painful price to pay, a natural consequence that fol lows. A banquet of consequences If a man defies the law of gravity (unless he invokes somb counter, law), he will pay som| consequences. There is nothing capricious or arbitrary about-the direction in which he falls. And so it is when men defy God’s moral order. There is eventually a price to pay. As Robert Louis Stevenson once said, “Sooner or later every man sits down to a banquet of consequences.” We also see a purposefulness in the selection of Noah. In the Babylonian epic, Utnapishtim was chosen simply because he was favored by Ea. In the story of Noah, however, the patriarch is chosen because God sees him as a righteous man, that there is m him something worth salvag ing So life is not capacious. Things do not “just happen ” Of cn they aie the results of living ither in harmony with or in re icllion against God’s order. Turn and be saved! Secondly, we see In the God if Noah a compassionate desire o save, rather than destroy. Ea oibid Utnapishtim to wain his leighbois, but no such restric lon was laid upon Noah. Even in he face of the retribution that is o come, there is a redemptive lossibility. This was often true vhen God sent his prophets to ell Israel of the terrible times ihead: if the people, even in the last moment, were to turn and lepent, God would have been happy to receive them. God de sired, not destruction, but the rcpentence of his people. It was their wickedness, not the venge fulness of God, that caused their destruction. The real truth of the story of Noah is not in that it agrees with so many flood epics through* out the world, hut that it tells us so much about God, man, and the world in which we live. (Bosed or) euthrtes copyrighted by the Division of Chn&tion Education, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA. Released by Community Press Service.)