The San Francisco Chronicle
MARCH 31, 1990, SATURDAY, FINAL EDITION
SECTION: EDITORIAL; Pg. A14; OPEN FORUM
HEADLINE: Fascism On the Farm
1990 The San Francisco Chronicle, MARCH 31, 1990
BYLINE: JAMES BOVARD
KEYWORD: ORANGES
BODY: As Carl Pescosolido, a grower in Exeter, observes, ''When they say I can
sell only 58 percent of my oranges, it's like someone taking 42 percent of my
land.'' Because the Department of Agriculture prevents farmers from selling harvested
oranges to their fellow citizens, some farmers are feeding their over-ripe oranges
to cattle instead.
FEDERAL CONTROLS
The controls are part of USDA's system of marketing orders, dating back to 1941.
The department announces each week in the Federal Register how many oranges it
will allow California farmers to ship. Marketing orders seek to create an artificial
shortage of oranges in order to drive up prices. If a farmer ships more than USDA
decrees, the Justice Department will come after him with its heavy guns.
Marketing orders are the clearest relic of the Mussolini school of agricultural
economics -- a program based on the New Deal philosophy of prosperity through
''universal monopoly and universal scarcity.'' USDA believes that growers of some
fruits and nuts cannot be trusted to wisely sell their own crops -- so it ''protects''
them by nullifying their right to sell their harvest.
THE ABSURDITY OF MARKETING ORDERS
The orange marketing order is a parcel of absurdities and inconsistencies. While
the government maintains a stranglehold on California farmers, Texas and Florida
orange growers are not restricted by the federal government. USDA also has no
controls over imports. The higher prices caused by USDA's marketing orders have
helped spur a fourfold increase in orange imports since 1983. Uncle Sam thereby
treats Chilean and Spanish orange growers far better than California farmers.
Marketing orders conflict with other federal programs. In 1982, a total of 83,000
tons of navel oranges were fed to cattle. Representative George Miller noted that
72,000 tons of those oranges ''were produced by federally subsidized water, a
result insulting to the people of the country.'' One federal agency spends over
$ 50 million a year to give farmers in dry or near-desert regions cut-rate water
-- and another federal agency then prohibits the farmers from selling their crops.
THE 'ORANGE POLICE'
USDA's ''orange police'' are doing a good job of protecting Americans against
overdoses of Vitamin C. This is especially unfortunate for the poor, who frequently
have severe Vitamin C deficiencies. But, according to USDA official Ben Darling,
''Oranges are not an essential food. People don't need oranges. They can take
vitamins.'' Maybe the public should be grateful that USDA is not also in charge
of vitamin marketing.
1990 The San Francisco Chronicle, MARCH 31, 1990
The most absurd aspect of the oranges cartel is that it punishes consumers without
enriching farmers. California farmers would be better off if they could sell all
their crop, even at reduced prices. As Pescosolido says, ''No USDA bureaucrat
has ever been able to answer a single question: Can you tell me how my economic
welfare is improved by your making it illegal for me to sell the product of my
labor?'' Federal controls have even depressed farmland value. A 1986 Journal of
Law and Economics study found, ''The inflation-adjusted, average per acre price
of California orange groves fell by 17 and 24 percent, respectively, between 1958,
the first year for which data are available, and 1984. During the same period,
the real value of farm acreage in the U.S. and in California more than doubled.''
ON THE DARK SIDE
Other crops are also controlled by marketing orders. USDA routinely forces farmers
to annually waste or squander up to 500 million lemons, 70 million pounds of almonds,
200 million pounds of raisins, 5 million pounds of filberts and millions of plums
and nectarines in order to drive up prices. This is the dark side of federal paternalism
-- a side that may extend to grain, cotton and other farmers in future years.
It is a crime that Uncle Sam bans Americans from eating more California oranges.
Marketing orders exemplify the principle that underlies much of our farm policy
-- that USDA can make America richer by forcing individuals to do wasteful things.
Markets are not perfect -- but the political-bureaucratic alternative is often
perfect idiocy.