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  1. #1
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    Key foods prices rising sharply...

    You knew it was coming folks now the reporter here is blaming higher prices partly on immigration crackdowns....

    McClatchy Washington Bureau
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    Posted on Tue, Aug. 14, 2007
    Prices for key foods are rising sharply
    Kevin G. Hall | McClatchy Newspapers

    last updated: August 15, 2007 02:48:16 PM

    MIDLAND, Va. — The Labor Department's most recent inflation data showed that U.S. food prices rose by 4.2 percent for the 12 months ending in July, but a deeper look at the numbers reveals that the price of milk, eggs and other essentials in the American diet are actually rising by double digits.

    Already stung by a two-year rise in gasoline prices, American consumers now face sharply higher prices for foods they can't do without. This little-known fact may go a long way to explaining why, despite healthy job statistics, Americans remain glum about the economy.

    Meeting with economic writers last week, President Bush dismissed several polls that show Americans are down on the economy. He expressed surprise that inflation is one of the stated concerns.

    "They cite inflation?" Bush asked, adding that, "I happen to believe the war has clouded a lot of people's sense of optimism."

    But the inflation numbers reveal the extent to which lower- and middle-income Americans are being pinched.

    The Bureau of Labor Statistics said in its July inflation report that egg prices are 33.7 percent higher than they were in July 2006. Over the same period, according to the department's consumer price index, whole milk was up 21.1 percent; fresh chicken 8.4 percent; navel oranges 13.6 percent; apples 8.7 percent. Dried beans were up 11.5 percent, and white bread just missed double-digit growth, rising by 8.8 percent.

    These numbers get lost in the broader inflation rate for all goods and services, which measured 2.4 percent for the same 12-month period. Across the economy, rising food prices were offset by falling prices for things bought at the mall: computers, cameras, clothing and shoes.

    "All of that stuff is going down in price, but prices for gasoline have gotten higher, and food prices have gone up," said Mark Vitner, a senior economist for Wachovia, a large national bank based in Charlotte, N.C.

    People also go to the mall a lot less than they go to the grocery store, so they're constantly reminded that dietary staples are up sharply.

    Why are food prices rising?

    It's partly because of corn prices, driven up by congressional mandates for ethanol production, which have reduced the amount of corn available for animal feed. It's also because of tougher immigration enforcement and a late spring freeze, which have made farm laborers scarcer and damaged fruit and vegetable crops, respectively. And it's because of higher diesel fuel costs to run tractors and attractive foreign markets that take U.S. production.

    The Labor Department's last detailed survey of consumer spending, in 2005, showed that Americans spent about 12.8 percent of their income on food. A bit more than 7 percent of their income was spent on food at home, and 5.7 percent was spent on food away from home.

    These percentages suggest that higher food prices, while unwelcome, won't break the bank for most consumers. But for retirees such as Jacqueline Wilson, 60, of Upper Marlboro, Md., rising food and fuel prices take a big bite out of fixed income.

    "I make every dollar count," said Wilson, outside a Giant supermarket. "I cut back. ... I get only as much as I need. I don't buy it because it is 10 for $10, but so that I'm using it and not wasting my money."

    Asked about her view of the economy, she answered, "Terrible."

    In broad terms, the economy isn't terrible. Unemployment is near record lows, and the second quarter posted a strong 3.4 percent growth rate. But it is for those Americans who are pinched by rising food and gasoline costs, and that's a lot of folks. Half the nation's families earn below the median family income of about $56,000. Three- fifths of American families report income under $70,000.

    At the Al-Mara farm in Midland, Va., Jeff and Patty Leonard run a large dairy operation where about 600 cows produce 19,000 pounds of milk each day. They plant about 1,000 acres of corn, so they don't face all of the rising feed costs like some farmers. But they sympathize with consumers because the costs of nitrogen fertilizers and diesel fuel have all gone up sharply, raising production costs by nearly 30 percent.

    "That's how your farmer feels here at home when we're trying to buy soybean meal, food for our cows and trying to maintain our equipment," said Patty Leonard. "I can understand exactly what the shopper is going through."

    Milk prices aren't set on the farm. That's done by marketing cooperatives, which this year have been successful in passing on higher production costs after several dismal years of prices that took dairy farmers back to the 1970s.

    "It's pretty much a realignment of the actual value of milk in today's dollar," Patty Leonard said. "Milk has been cheap for a long, long time."

    Globalization also explains higher milk prices. Australia, a leading milk exporter, is struggling through a drought, and European governments are pulling back dairy subsidies. So U.S. farmers, aided by a weak dollar, are stepping in to meet growing demand for milk products in China and India. That's pinched supply at home and abroad, driving up prices.

    "U.S. per capita dairy consumption is the highest it's been since 1987," said Chris Galen, vice president of the National Milk Producers Federation, pointing to rising U.S. demand for cheese, made from milk. "Americans are eating more cheese than ever — not just volume but per capita."

    To make more milk, or raise more chickens that lay more eggs, farmers need feed corn and other feed products. But corn prices have soared over the past year as Congress pushes ethanol, a renewable fuel made from corn. Fields that previously grew soybeans are now yielding corn, and that's driven up the price of soybeans as they become scarce.

    Iowa State University's Center for Agricultural and Rural Development shocked the farm sector earlier this summer with a report that corn farmers are expected to lock in prices of $4 a bushel through 2010, about double what corn fetched two years ago.

    "You will probably be seeing these prices rise for quite a long time and stabilizing, maybe, but not going back to the $2-a-bushel corn," said Jacinto Feitosa, co-director of the center in Ames, Iowa.

    2007 McClatchy Newspapers

    http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/18902.html

  2. #2
    Senior Member BetsyRoss's Avatar
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    They're mostly not even gone yet!
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    Senior Member NCByrd's Avatar
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    So when you read all the REASONS for prices going up.......it really has NOTHING TO DO WITH THE ILLEGALS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  4. #4
    Senior Member IndianaJones's Avatar
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    Well with less illegals we will definitely spend less fuel, need much less corn and look at all the money we will save from less drunk driving accidents, less emergency room draining, less job losses, etc. etc.. Lot's of plusses, no minuses!
    We are NOT a nation of immigrants!

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    They are not EVEN gone yet - They not gone at all.

    Have we had reports of massive returns ?

    Have we had huge numbers of want ads placed around to replace all these workers?

    Just got some gossip - treat it as such - but one poultry company is laying off some workers. The talk is they are outsourcing some of their work - catching and clean out and other things to some other companies.

    This may be why Tyson's is not worried. There workers are now 'independent contractors' now working for the other companies.
    When a big corporation gets a no-match, the employee is already gone - to the other company. Now how long will it take the SS to realize no-match there? A year - 2 years - how long?

    Also, there is some speculation that chicken sales are down -
    That may be why Tyson's is giving tons of it to LULAC - maybe?

    Oh, I wish we would get together and make sure they all have tons of chicken to donate.
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  6. #6
    MW
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    nntrixie wrote:

    Have we had reports of massive returns ?

    Have we had huge numbers of want ads placed around to replace all these workers?
    All we've had are promises from Chertoff and Bush. Anyone heard of any recent raids? Nope, I didn't think so, just promises of things to come.

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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  7. #7
    saveourcountry's Avatar
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    They're going to punish us.

  8. #8
    Senior Member blkkat99's Avatar
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    Doesn't this story just prove that Illegals don't keep prices down?

    Don't we keep hearing that prices are kept low because we have illegals doing work Americans won't do? Well then why is everything going up?
    According to the report I read today on http://drudgereport.com
    It stated that meat and chicken are up....don't Illegals dominte this industry?
    Produce up ....dont they dominate this industry?
    Grains, beans, milk, seafood...dont they dominate these industries?

    Also they didn't mention housing, but the median cost of housing has risen every year by thousands and thousandsof dollars!
    If they are keeping prices down then why is everything going up? Humm....Me smells a rat here!

  9. #9
    Senior Member LegalUSCitizen's Avatar
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    Illegals are making housing unaffordable for hard-working Americans because of supply and demand. (Especially in Florida and it will spread everywhere, if nothing is done to stop illegal immigration)

    They can afford it because they pack so many people in.

    Americans primarily only have the nuclear family living in their residence.

    The government doesn't care about what this does to the quality of life for American citizens. It doesn't have ANY effect on those holding elected office.

    (No one in Congress lives on a street with illegal aliens, that's for sure)
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  10. #10
    Senior Member LegalUSCitizen's Avatar
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    They're mostly not even gone yet!
    I agree, BR!
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