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Old 04-24-2004, 12:24 AM
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Head for the hills...milk prices are increasing!

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor...ices&printer=1

Quote:
Milk Prices Expected to Hit Record Highs

By IRA DREYFUSS, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Consumers are likely to see milk prices rise, probably to record levels, because the Agriculture Department is raising the minimum price paid to farmers to a record high, dairy experts say.

The department announced Friday it is raising the new minimum price for farmers to $1.69 per gallon, a 50-cent increase. The previous record was $1.40 per gallon in February 1999.

Larry Salathe, a senior economist for the department said the new minimum takes effect on May 1.

The price increase for farmers could send the price of a gallon up to $3.40 at the grocery store, assuming that all of it will be passed on to consumers, said Ed Jesse, a dairy economist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

"I don't think there's any question about it," he said.

Consumers can expect to see almost an immediate effect. They'll notice rising prices next month when the department's new farm price is in place, Jesse said.

Prices can vary from the national average based on the region where the milk is produced and the type of milk sold, such as skim or whole. The Pennsylvania Milk Marketing Board raised its milk prices by an average of 58 cents on Friday, taking into account the effect of the USDA action on the state. Prices will vary within the state.

In Mechanicsburg, Pa., shopper Debby Murphy had just bought milk for her husband and three kids, paying $3.06 for a gallon. It will cost her $3.70 in May. She was disappointed with the increase, but it won't deter her. "I'm going to buy it regardless," she said. "I'll probably try to make it last a little longer."

A gallon of fresh, whole, fortified milk sold for $3 in February 1999, the second-highest price on record, according to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The Agriculture Department's authority to set minimum milk prices dates back to the Depression. The policy is aimed at helping dairy farmers' maintain their income when prices hit bottom. By tamping down wild swings in the potentially volatile milk market, the department also tries to keep a steady milk supply for consumers.

Milk prices have swung sharply. The latest spike is bouncing off a 25-year low set last year when the nation had a surplus of dairy cows and farmers were flooding the market with milk.

With milk prices low and beef prices high, farmers began sending their cows to slaughter, reducing the number of dairy cows that give milk and setting the stage for milk prices to swing up. Compounding the reduction in herd size was a cut in the supply of a Monsanto growth hormone that prompts cows to give milk.

Farmers also were seeing added costs due to higher prices for soybeans, which are processed and fed to their animals.

Plus, the Agriculture Department's ban on imports of cattle from Canada, instituted after Canada reported a case of mad cow disease in May 2003, kept U.S. farmers from buying more cows from their historic Canadian suppliers.

High milk prices may linger through the summer, but may retreat in the fall — unless there is a dry, hot summer, Salathe said. Heat reduces cows' milk production, and dry weather makes the grass that they feed on less nutritious. If the summer is bad for milk production, prices won't ease until later, he said.

Americans may have to pay more for milk, but they've also been drinking less. A consumer drank an average of 22 gallons of milk for the year in 2001, including everything from whole milk to fat-free, down one-half gallon from 2000.
Just seemed kind of interesting. Don't really see why 70 cents is such a big deal, but ehh.
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Old 04-24-2004, 02:03 AM
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Because people buy a lot of milk. If people went through a gallon a week (how much on average would people go through? We don't have gallons here) that's an extra $35 a year. For people who are stuggling that can be a lot of money,
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Old 04-24-2004, 03:16 AM
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Yeah, what Lauren said - it doesn't seem like much if you're a middle-class teenager, but if you're a single mother of four who already squeeze the life out of every cent, every increase in the price of neccessities show.

Also, I find it interesting that people can complain about paying 50 cents to the NEA, yet they don't complain about paying 50 cents more for a gallon of milk.
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Old 04-24-2004, 06:51 AM
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Good. My family is dairy farmers and they struggle to get by. They barely get more now for milk than they did 50 years ago. As long as more of the money goes to the farmers.
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Old 04-24-2004, 07:36 AM
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I think a better way to ensure farmers' survival lies more in subsidizing milk and dairy and less in passing the cost over to the consumers. If the prices increase, the consumers will buy less, and thus, the farmers would get less money, not more.
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Old 04-24-2004, 09:12 AM
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That's why Dairy Queen and other ice cream places prices are rising. People are getting so pissed about it, but there is nothing they can do.
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Old 04-27-2004, 10:16 PM
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It's said that we can determine a lot about our society by the price on a gallon of milk...

Rising milk prices will kill volume, which is already (at best) stagnant in North America; milk consumption, as noted in the report, is decreasing.
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Old 04-28-2004, 09:34 PM
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I pay $3.69 for 4L of milk. Don't ask me to convert that into gallons because I have no idea how to do it.
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Old 04-28-2004, 10:34 PM
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Quote:
Originally posted by Mrs. George Eads:
<STRONG>I pay $3.69 for 4L of milk. Don't ask me to convert that into gallons because I have no idea how to do it.</STRONG>
4 liter = 1.0566882 gallon [US, liquid]
3.69 Canadian Dollar = 2.68559 US Dollar
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Old 04-28-2004, 11:09 PM
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Why was the women paying $3.06 a gallon to begin with?

White Hen always had skim for $1.99 and Aldi's had it for about the same too.

It just depends on what type you buy and where you buy it.
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Old 04-29-2004, 12:51 AM
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where I work, milk can range between 2.74 and 2.96. then you have all those low carb milks/organic milks which are about 3-something.

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