Yes, you're hypothesis is incomplete though. Besides no national debt and a monetary system overhaul, you have to think of de-regulation, the Chevron ruling of the supreme court, and the pivot to true capitalism.
I was talking with an old friend a couple days ago about this subject. We thought about the best way to explain it: it has been widely stated that corn farmers only get about four cents for the corn in a box if cereal. Lets say you were going to make a box of frosted flakes. If it takes four cents for the corn flower. you can probably imagine the sugar coating and everything for the process to be another 6-10 cents. I imagine with packaging, all-in maybe 30 cents Our company does not import anything, and taxes are not a big expense. Even with labor (which even with wages increasing; the personnel cost will be lower (mostly thanks to deregulation). so all-in and complete...lets say 50 cents.
The grocery chain needs to make money (transport and brick and mortar expenses. That box of healthy cereal in less that a dollar in the shelf. While the farmer is paid more than currently, their costs are much lower (seed, fertilizer, and less government).
Now think of the effect that in every step of getting that box of cereal to you, every person in that chain, makes more, but that is more than offset by lower regulation, normal ingredients ( cancer-causers are expensive!), common sense biz operations( no more money for a board that gives to BLM).So...We have a box of cereal that is currently 5 dollars selling for less than a buck!
I might be crazy...but I think it will go something like that!
P.S. I forgot that the farmer still uses John Deere combiners, but he can work on them himself.
Yes, you're hypothesis is incomplete though. Besides no national debt and a monetary system overhaul, you have to think of de-regulation, the Chevron ruling of the supreme court, and the pivot to true capitalism. I was talking with an old friend a couple days ago about this subject. We thought about the best way to explain it: it has been widely stated that corn farmers only get about four cents for the corn in a box if cereal. Lets say you were going to make a box of frosted flakes. If it takes four cents for the corn flower. you can probably imagine the sugar coating and everything for the process to be another 6-10 cents. I imagine with packaging, all-in maybe 30 cents Our company does not import anything, and taxes are not a big expense. Even with labor (which even with wages increasing; the personnel cost will be lower (mostly thanks to deregulation). so all-in and complete...lets say 50 cents. The grocery chain needs to make money (transport and brick and mortar expenses. That box of healthy cereal in less that a dollar in the shelf. While the farmer is paid more than currently, their costs are much lower (seed, fertilizer, and less government). Now think of the effect that in every step of getting that box of cereal to you, every person in that chain, makes more, but that is more than offset by lower regulation, normal ingredients ( cancer-causers are expensive!), common sense biz operations( no more money for a board that gives to BLM).So...We have a box of cereal that is currently 5 dollars selling for less than a buck! I might be crazy...but I think it will go something like that! P.S. I forgot that the farmer still uses John Deere combiners, but he can work on them himself.