AGRICULTURE

AGRIBUSINESS

Self-contained

Requires many outside inputs

Fuel, fertilizer, insecticides, pesticides, equipment, food

 

Small scale

50 to 150 acres

 

Large Scale

300+ acres

 

Diverse

 

Monoculture

 

Lower "efficiency"

 

Vulnerable to pests, price fluctations

 

Low pollution

 

High pollution

 

Byproducts stay on farm

 

Runoff from fields, "wastes" accumulate

 

Many laborers

 

Few laborers

Maintains local culture

 

Destroys local culture

High cancer and suicide rates

 

Sustainable

 

Nonsustainable

 

Maintains soil

 

"Mines soil"

 

Works with nature

 

Industrial Approach

 

Income remains local

 

Income centralized

Guys in suits get most

Durable

 

Very vulnerable to disruptions

Dependent on central facilities, transportation

 

Ignored by Res. Univ.'s

 

Supported by Res. Univ.'s

 

Ignored by USDA

 

USDA supported

Tens of millions of small farmers and farm laborers have lost their jobs due to decisions made by the federal government. This was no accident or unforseen consequence, the U.S. government undertook policies with the express purpose of forcing large numbers of people off small farms and towns and into cities and factories. The "menial" farm laborer jobs have been replaced partly by jobs in large food processing plants, many with atrocious work conditions, such as those found in chicken processing plants. Another goal in the industrialization of agriculture was to produce large surpluses with the intent of using the surpluses to compensate for the huge quanities of foreign goods that were being and are still being purchased by U.S. citizens. One part of this policy has been very successful, they have succeeded in destroying much of rural culture in the U.S. and there are fewer farmers every year. The other goal of using farm surpluses to bring down the balance of payments has been less successful. This is mainly because other countries have adopted the industrial approach to agriculture and have driven down prices to alltime lows and U.S. consumption seems to know no bounds.

Recent acquisitions of seed producers by chemical companies such as Monsanto, DuPont and Novartis have placed a substantial portion of the germplasm necessary to develop new crop varieties in the hands of a few very large and powerful corporations. These companies now control virtually all aspects of agribusiness with the exception of equipment production. They are in a position to force farmers to buy from them and grow the crops as proscribed by the company. Farmers may become little more than tenants who, while they own the land, do all the hard work and take all the financial risks, must operate their farms according to the dictates of these large corporations.