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Why do we bring in outside food? James Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University.

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Presentation on theme: "Why do we bring in outside food? James Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Why do we bring in outside food? James Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University

2 Recent Food Scares Chinese pet food with melamine California spinach Mexican green onions Mad cow disease Bird flu Genetically modified foods

3 Reasons to Buy Local Cincinnati Enquirer – August 7, 2007 Support local businesses Food safety Fossil fuel use Taste Nutrition

4 Does Eating Local Food Save Energy? No long-distance transport Where do you buy it? How much driving around does this entail? How much do you buy per trip? Long-distance transport of food doesn’t use much energy per pound Full semi-truckloads often travelling partly by rail The Economist cited research that half of energy use in food transport is by consumers in England If you preserve food to keep it through the winter it uses a lot of energy ( even commercially)

5 Some questions Could we feed ourselves with locally grown food? Is locally grown food safer? Do we need to import food? Is food from elsewhere riskier than domestically raised food? Is our food safe? Is it riskier than 10 years ago?

6 Could we feed ourselves with locally grown food? No! And if we tried it would be prohibitively expensive And we would have very little variety Lack of specialization would sacrifice all economies of size We are surrounded by cities and very little farmland Lots of labor needed – immigration issue

7 Is locally grown food safer? Probably not! Bigger, specialized farms can concentrate on details Small, multi-product farms have too many balls in the air Most food safety problems are because of mistakes

8 Do we need to import food from abroad? Not necessarily We would lose variety in our diet Food costs would go up No bananas, coffee, tea, chocolate No grapes in the winter We export enormous amounts of food They won’t buy our stuff unless we reciprocate

9 General Characteristics of U.S. Agriculture U.S. has about 4.5% of world’s people 12% of cotton 36% of corn 31% soybeans 6% of land 22% of apples

10 Economies of Size in Farming Larger farms can specialize more Use equipment better Spread management over more units Get better rates on shipping and purchasing For crops, maximum size hit limits because of distance For animals, limit is very large

11 Agriculture is regionally specialized Corn belt Wheat belt California fruit and vegetables Pennsylvania dairy Infrastructure needs enough producers Processing plants, machinery dealers, handlers all need volume to compete

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15 Is food from elsewhere riskier than domestically raised food? It is hard to say Maybe. We have less control and they have less accountability Lots of our problems come from the US Meat problems Spinach

16 Is our food safe? Is it riskier than 10 years ago? It is much safer than before 24 hour news makes us more aware of problems elsewhere Biggest food risk by far is in preparation Lots of food poisoning at home and in restaurants

17 Long-term vs short-term risk Short term – food poisoning Long term – pesticide residues, carcinogens, GMOs? Biggest long-term food risk by far is what we eat and how much – obesity, heart disease, diabetes – not the food risk as such, but food choice and behavior

18 My own view I buy at the farmer’s market to a degree Local sweet corn is vastly better Like to buy local if it makes sense I do not buy organic food I love the variety of food available – bing cherries on New Year’s Day, strawberries year round Wallner’s Garden

19 For consumers the good old days weren’t all that good Canned beans and corn Apples, oranges and bananas in winter Lots of potatoes, onions, and carrots No fresh fish Food was more expensive Much less fresh produce Much less variety

20 What would happen if we had to buy local Expensive food Limited selection Poor quality Farmers in poverty – multi-product farms ended for good reasons How about New York City?


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