This is a sad story, indeed, about the woes of the dairy industry in CA.
But amongst the sadness of it, note that it follows exactly the lines that EJ argued before.
Suppliers go out of business.
Excess supply dries up.
Fewer suppliers remain
ensuing shortage with less producers, constant demand
Prices rise.
The logical conclusion of the above article is exactly this scenario.
In fact, it is a logical tautology: note the bolded part. If milk prices don't rise, farmers will go out of business (meaning that milk prices must rise due to less farmers producing it). It seems there is no way in this scenario that prices can't rise, unless the government bails them out...hmm, interesting thought.
Current prices are about half of what it costs California producers to feed and milk their herds; every carton sold in the supermarket represents a loss on the farm. Farmers are staying afloat by getting loans secured by every cow, tractor and acre they own. But experts say that if milk prices don't rise in the coming months, many farmers will burn through their cash and go out of business.
Suppliers go out of business.
Excess supply dries up.
Fewer suppliers remain
ensuing shortage with less producers, constant demand
Prices rise.
The logical conclusion of the above article is exactly this scenario.
In fact, it is a logical tautology: note the bolded part. If milk prices don't rise, farmers will go out of business (meaning that milk prices must rise due to less farmers producing it). It seems there is no way in this scenario that prices can't rise, unless the government bails them out...hmm, interesting thought.
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