The Everyday Economist

Taking from one hand…

October 18, 2007 · 1 Comment

The New York Times reports:

Taking a cue from Midwestern farmers who have improved their lot by selling corn to ethanol distilleries, sugar cane and sugar beet farmers want an ethanol deal of their own, paid for by American taxpayers.

A little-noticed provision in the new farm bill working its way through Congress would oblige the Agriculture Department to buy surplus domestic sugar caused by the expected influx of Mexican sugar next year. Then the government would sell it, most likely at a steep discount, to ethanol producers to add to their fermentation tanks. The Bush administration is fighting the measure.

Sugar producers say the cost would be relatively low and the plan would help keep prices at a level they consider fair. As a side benefit, the deal would allow the nation to produce more ethanol to mix with gasoline, displacing some foreign oil, they say. [Emphasis added.]

The only “fair” price is one that is determined in the free market by individuals with dispersed knowledge.

Here is a simplified version of the plan:

1.) The government taxes you, thus reducing your disposable income.

2.) The government uses the money generated from taxes to purchase sugar from an industry that already receives $1.2 billion in subsidies from the government at what these domestic producers consider to be a “fair” price. (Note: According to the NYT, the “market price for sugar in the United States … is typically twice the world market price.” Is this a “fair” price? For whom?)

3.) This domestic sugar, which would be bought by the government for an estimated “22 cents per pound”, would then sold for “4 to 7 cents a pound” to an ethanol industry that is already heavily subsidized and restricted from foreign competition.

4.) Ethanol producers would then be forced to purchase new equipment that can process this sugar, which would increase the cost of production and thus the price of ethanol.

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1 response so far ↓

  • Ironman // October 18, 2007 at 2:10 pm | Reply

    How about this plan instead:

    1. The government reduces sugar tariffs, allowing more foreign produced sugar in.

    2. Ethanol producers, attracted by the lower prices of sugar with respect to corn, combined with its higher yield potential for making more ethanol with less effort, retool anyway to pursue this productive advantage.

    3. Ethanol producers bid the price of sugar up much as what has already happened with corn, making domestically produced sugar more competitive.

    4. Everybody wins. Including the corn producers who, being the bunch of over-subsidized whiny jerks that they are, will continue to get subsidies from the government anyway, only this time, for not growing corn.

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