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Agricultural relief (Pt. 2)

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fullscreen: Agricultural relief (Pt. 2)

Multivolume work

Identifikator:
1831932415
Document type:
Multivolume work
Title:
Agricultural relief
Place of publication:
Washington
Publisher:
Gov. Pr. Off.
Year of publication:
1928
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
Get license information via the feedback formular.

Volume

Identifikator:
1831934280
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-232071
Document type:
Volume
Title:
Agricultural relief
Volume count:
Pt. 2
Place of publication:
Washington
Publisher:
Gov. Pr. Off.
Year of publication:
1928
Scope:
III S., S. 70 - 179
Digitisation:
2022
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
Get license information via the feedback formular.

Contents

Table of contents

  • Agricultural relief
  • Agricultural relief (Pt. 2)
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Statement of hon. W.M. Whittington, third district of Mississippi
  • Statement of Mr. O. F. Bledsor, Jr. president staple cotton growers cooperative association, Greenwood, Miss.
  • Statement of Matt Grennan, Rock Falls, Ill.
  • Statement of John W. Maher, Devils Lake, N. Dak.

Full text

AGRIOULTURAL RELIEF 
123 
Mr. BLEpsoE. Raise the average world price. 
Mr. Fort. Raise the average world price at harvest time. Now, 
[ think we agreed in our private talks that through the entire crop 
year the average weighted price at which cotton sells, actual cotton 
in the hands of the final consumers, represents pretty close the aver- 
age weighted price that anybody can expect to say it is worth. 
Mr. BLEDpsOE. Yes. 
Mr. Fort. Consequently, anything that tends to raise the weighted 
price at any one period, such as the harvest period, will automatically 
be reflected in a loss at any subsequent period. 
Mr. BLeEpsoEr. No, sir. 
Mr. Fort. Because otherwise you would increase the economic 
price of the entire crop. 
Mr. BLEpsoE. You will find out by studying that practically all of 
that increase is for storage, insurance and interest, which results in 
a slightly higher late season price over a period of years. 
Mr. Fort. That is what I mean. When you get a part of that 
profit in the harvest months where you now don’t get it, you will 
get a little less for it in subsequent months. 
Mr. BLEDSOE. Yes, but then you would not have a market at all, 
and you would not get service unless you paid some profit to the 
men that carried it. 
Mr. Fort. I can see how you would get a profit; I can see where, 
under your plan, he will get a little more in October and a little 
less in May. 
Mr. BLEpsoE. If you take 100 per cent of the cooperatives. 
Mr. Fort. If we enter into this equalization fee proposal—and, 1 
am regarding these 20 years’ figures as interlocking, as you have 
explained them as interlocking. 
Mr. BLEpsoE. No, I don’t speak of them as interlocking. 
Mr. Fort. Do you think the insurance plan would work without 
the equalization fee? 
Mr. BLEpsoE. I subscribe to the four proposals that have been 
made here, Mr. Fort, and I will tell you that I think they would 
help carry the surplus. 
Mr. Fort. Let me get this clear. You don’t regard the equaliza- 
tion fee and insurance fee as entirely interlocked? 
Mr. BLEpsoE. No, sir. Duiing the ordinary course of business, 
the insurance premium will build up your cooperative so that in time 
it will help to carry the surplus that is left over. 
* Mr. Fort. If your insurance plan enables you to finance the de- 
livery phase in the event you were caught on the early market, 
would not that place you in a position so that you can show the value 
of this plan so as to bring everybody in to your cooperative? 
Mr. Buepsoe. Well, if I understand you, that is stating it back- 
wards. It would apply to all the cooperatives. They would be in 
a position to carry the surplus, and if this board did not want to 
load it on to the cooperatives, they would have the equalization fee, 
and could hire the cooperatives to carry it. 
Mr. Fort. I am not disputing that. But, if you have your insur- 
ance feature adequately financed, then you have gotten your coop- 
eratives into the position where there is a real inducement to bring 
the noncooperators in? 
Mr. BLEpsoE. Yes. that is i. 
’ 
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