PART ONE
Tue FieLp or PriMARY PRrobpuUcCTION
CHAPTER TWO
THE UNITED STATES AS A FARMING COUNTRY
WHEN man obtains wild honey from a forest, gold from river gravels,
grass from natural meadows, or fish from streams, he simply reaches
out and takes what nature has produced. For such products, nature
does nearly all the work. In most cases, however, man and nature
enter into a more nearly equal partnership. They work together as
producers. In agriculture, for instance, nature supplies soil, wind,
rain, and sun; man furnishes seed and tools; and both partners work
vigorously to make the crop profitable. In mining, nature furnishes
deposits of rich ores that she has been storing up for ages, and it is
man’s work to discover and extract them. Forests are like mines in
that they are nature’s storehouses.
In the field of primary production we shall study the materials that
are produced by man and nature together.
The occupations of primary production. Five occupations—farm-
ing, fishing, mining, lumbering, and hunting — represent the ways in
which man obtains products directly from nature. Except for hunt-
ing, which is of little commercial importance, these primary occupa-
tions are all practiced extensively in every continent, most of them
in every country, whereas manufacturing is highly developed in only
a comparatively few advanced countries. The primary producers
supply the world’s pantry and the stock room for all manufacturing
plants. Without them, the world’s activities would come to a stand-
still. We shall study the four chief primary occupations separately,
beginning with farming.
The importance of farming. Farming is the most important of all
occupations. In the world as a whole the number of people engaged in
it and the value of its products make it more important than all other
occupations combined. In some countries, such as India, Hungary,
and China, more than two thirds of the men are farmers. Even in the
United States, where manufacturing, commerce, and mining are of
great importance, a quarter of the men are farmers.