How bad is this economy going to get?

We need the economy to start opening back on May 4. Crank up production to provide medical resources and the like. None of this gets better by suppressing economic output.
 
I'm mostly concerned about crop harvest and getting them to market so they can get to people.

We have lots of food being grown, but we need harvesters and transportation to get it to market, don't want issues with milk going bad because it isn't going to market on time, or vegetables going bad in the field. If we are concerned about the economy, get ready for what will happen when food shortages start to happen.
 
I'm mostly concerned about crop harvest and getting them to market so they can get to people.

We have lots of food being grown, but we need harvesters and transportation to get it to market, don't want issues with milk going bad because it isn't going to market on time, or vegetables going bad in the field. If we are concerned about the economy, get ready for what will happen when food shortages start to happen.
Then you don’t want to see this.
 
We have lots of food being grown, but we need harvesters and transportation to get it to market, don't want issues with milk going bad because it isn't going to market on time, or vegetables going bad in the field. If we are concerned about the economy, get ready for what will happen when food shortages start to happen.

If that happens we are all going to starve to death quickly.

I bet the Progressives like LongestHorn will be happy, saying it is great that so many people are losing weight.
 
If that happens we are all going to starve to death quickly.

I bet the Progressives like LongestHorn will be happy, saying it is great that so many people are losing weight.
Ha!

That's like 7-8 or so years ago when some politicians said it was great that so many of the new jobs were just part-time. That gives workers more time to spend at home with their families! A food shortage = a blessing in disguise for a fat nation! That's the spin.
 
Currently, the national food problem is mainly tied to breakdowns in the transportation, labor, and middlemen systems--not the underproduction of food. If planting season goes poorly, obviously that's a problem. If this shakes out marginal producers, count on a massive consolidation coming out of all this.

The video talked a lot about dairy. Dairy has already been consolidated into a smaller number of huge producers (dairy is not alone in this). Many of them have been in California's Central Valley where the water problems and regulatory problems have gotten worse. Some of the big California dairymen have opened huge satellite dairy farms in the Texas panhandle, North of Amarillo, and are in the process of making the Texas farms their primary operations. As an interesting aside (for those who are interested), many of these giant California + Texas dairymen are descendants of Portuguese immigrants. There are also many recent Dutch immigrant dairymen and their progeny in the Texas big dairy farm industry as well.
 
Currently, the national food problem is mainly tied to breakdowns in the transportation, labor, and middlemen systems--not the underproduction of food. If planting season goes poorly, obviously that's a problem. If this shakes out marginal producers, count on a massive consolidation coming out of all this.
That's true. Speaking of labor, a Tyson factory in Georgia just had two workers die from the virus (Link).

And from another article (link) the following excerpt shows how supply line problems are beginning to threaten the nation's protein supply...in which case the amount of food would eventually become a problem in addition to the distribution problem.

Days after President Trump extended America’s quarantine guidelines, Tyler Beaver, the 31-year-old founder of brokerage Beaf Cattle Co., couldn’t get hold of the rations that feed his clients’ cows. He’d already tried sellers in the traditional producing areas of the U.S. such as Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma, only to find they were mostly sold out. Soon, in a bid to connect his customers with a feed mill still willing to sell, he changed strategy and tried to pull feed from the Delta region, hundreds of miles away — again without luck.

Just as virus-spooked consumers have rushed to grocery stores to stockpile everything from toilet paper to pasta, farmers raising America’s cattle, hogs, and chickens have filled their bins with feed, fearing the spread of the coronavirus would disrupt their supply chains. “I’ve had some calls from customers of mine looking for feed because the mills are out,” says the Fayetteville, Ark.-based Beaver. “There’s a rush to buy just because of the uncertainty in the market. They just don’t want to be caught without.”

Keeping America’s 95 million cows, 77 million pigs, and 9 billion chickens fed isn’t as simple as it may seem. Farmers are worried their feed mills could close as employees get sick or that their slaughterhouses could slow production, forcing them to keep animals for longer. They’re also concerned that a shortage of trucks, which are being waylaid to supply supermarkets, could make it harder for farm supplies to reach them.

Even the plunge in gasoline demand affects the feed supply. As ethanol plants shut down — because the fuel additive isn’t needed when gas isn’t selling — the animal feed market is being starved of an important ingredient called dried distillers grains (DDGs) that are a byproduct of ethanol production. Distillers grain is a key ingredient in rations for beef cattle and dairy cows.​
 
That's like 7-8 or so years ago when some politicians said it was great that so many of the new jobs were just part-time. That gives workers more time to spend at home with their families! A food shortage = a blessing in disguise for a fat nation! That's the spin.

And the media called people out of work during Obama's term "funemployment".
 
Specialized agriculture is efficient, but the old-style (mostly) self-sufficient farms weren’t so vulnerable to supply chain problems. Long gone are the days where there were mostly small farmers who both farmed some cash crops and also raised some pigs, chickens, and/or cows (for personal consumption and cash), with a big vegetable garden and maybe a little orchard.
 
Was there any needs test? Were all 6,000 truly in need? If so then good
But this from the link,
"Families in need waited hours to get their hands on fresh fruit, vegetables and other non-perishable goods that have become hard to find in traditional stores as panic-buying leaves shelves empty. "
suggests maybe some were there with a different motive
 
Was there any needs test? Were all 6,000 truly in need? If so then good
But this from the link,
"Families in need waited hours to get their hands on fresh fruit, vegetables and other non-perishable goods that have become hard to find in traditional stores as panic-buying leaves shelves empty. "
suggests maybe some were there with a different motive
Well, if it makes you feel better, it says they waited in line for hours. How much fun can that be? So if they received, say $200 worth of groceries in five hours, that’s about $40 an hour. And while they performed no service and produced nothing, one can argue waiting in line for hours is kind of like work.
 
They received enough food for the rest of the month
If any slacker who did need it took food away from someone who really needs it the slackers should be ashamed
Of course people who do that have no shame
 
They received enough food for the rest of the month
If any slacker who did need it took food away from someone who really needs it the slackers should be ashamed
Of course people who do that have no shame
I agree, but what can you do? Have a government official have each person document they are destitute?
 
That is not a food bank in that article, that is a flea market on the south side. I'm sure if someone set up a free food give away in the poor side of town in Dallas there would be cars of people lining up as well.

FAKE NEWS!!!!

I'd bet someone money that most of those people were democrat voters.
 
I'd bet someone money that most of those people were democrat voters.
How come the people at the food banks are considered as sucking the government’s teat, but the CEO of Boeing and the hedge fund managers being bailed out by the federal reserve relieving them of their junk bonds are deserving capitalists essential to the well being of America? What’s the difference?
 
The Wall Street editorial board is a notoriously conservative group, usually supporting conservative policies and Republican presidents.

So, when the WSJ writes an op-ed hammering the sitting GOP president, it's worth standing up and taking notice.

Except on West Mall. And TexAgs.

Fake News!
 

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