Apis, your above assessment is correct, and my answer to the above is the agriculturist of this nation has to form cooperatives and sell their own products. Our pecan farmers could make candy and pies and sell them to the public. Yes, it would take some up front money and some time to get the business operational, but in three or four years they could be selling pecans at six or seven dollars a pound in lieu of 0.90 cents per pound.
That's why I keep repeating that beekeepers should raise their prices. Sell your own honey or become the servant of the middle man, the man that does not have as much skin in the game as the producer. We have farmers in my area that have two or three million dollars tied up in land and equipment and they earn a very meager living. Some of their children qualify for free lunch. When I seriously think of this, I am astounded.
I have purchased land several times through Capital Farm Production companies. At the time of purchase, I was required to buy a percentage of the loan in company stock. My last purchase of $349,000.00 costs me a bit over 1,400 dollars per month in mortgage payments, but twice a year I receive a patronage check. Those two checks add up to five to six thousand dollars. I have a competitive loan, and I share in the cooperatives profits. That is the model that farmers should use, but they all seem to take in stride the system in place. The system that is robbing them of their just rewards. again, rant over.