By Victor Davis Hanson from the PJ Media
I have lived on the same farm for 59
years and seen at least three boom-and-bust farm cycles — one in the late
1960s, another in the early 1980s, and a third right now. I’ve witnessed
raisins, for example, at $1,420 a ton 35 years ago, then $410 a ton, then $700
a ton — and now almost $2,000. The old wisdom insisted that almond acreage
could never exceed 200,000 acres without a crash, that prices would never go
over $1 pound to the farmer, that production could not go much over 3,000 lbs.
per acre.
Now? There are now 800,000 plus
acres of California almonds, prices near $3 a pound, and new varieties are
creeping up to 4,000 lbs. per acre. Some almond orchards remind me of alien
organisms: lousy soil, undersized trees, tiny roots — and loaded with nuts to
the point that props are needed to keep the trees from toppling over, as
agronomy keeps these artificial creations going with daily IV fusions of water
and nutrients. It is almost as if anything on the tree that is not a nut is
genetically superfluous.
When I began farming full-time in
the cresting boom of 1980, vineyard or orchard went for almost $10,000 an acre.
I saw it crash three years later and prices dip as low as $3,000 an acre for
what was then called “Thompson Worthless” vineyards. By the 1990s, prices were
back up to between $7,000 and $10,000 per acre — only to go back down too
$5,000 by 2003. And now? Bare land can go for $15,000 an acre and up; a
productive vineyard or nut orchard sells for $25,000 to $30,000. “They” say
$35,000 an acre is on the horizon.
I am getting old and remain a cynic
(see Fields Without Dreams and Letters From an American Farmer). All the
same, I think eventually the latest boom will likewise bust. (Most of the
“rich” I know out here made their money by emulating J.Paul Getty’s de facto
rule of “buy low, sell high — everything can be sold or bought, all the time.”
Most of my friends in these parts
disagree about a looming bust. Things are “different” now, they swear. Why?
Human nature has been altered? The U.S. dollar has never been more stable? The
debt is small? Governance is unusually competent? There will be plenty of water
— new dams; the sneaky little smelt will get his comeuppance; salmon won’t get
their water from mountains to the sea?
Booming for 100 Years?
But I digress, so let us count their
reasons for optimism: 1) 400 million new empowered consumers in India and China
enjoy a fig, some almonds, or a raisin or two as relish for their California
rice, wheat, or beef, and will buy all they can of the state’s staples and
specialty crops from our Pacific ports. Now both countries possess both the
tastes and the wherewithal to pay for our farm exports.
2) America is no longer a nation of
250 million, but nearing 320 million souls. Seventy-million extra mouths
translate into an entirely new consumer class the size of France right here in
the U.S., prompting new domestic demand as never before.
3) Land is finite, or rather,
shrinking. Suburbanization, shortages of water, higher costs — all that and
more mean that we are not going to see all that much further increases in
production. New hybrids, better technique, drip irrigation, novel fertilizers,
intensification of farmland, and more are reaching their theoretical limits.
Existing land is more likely to be encroached upon than new acreage opened up
for farming.
The optimists believe that at last
the supply/demand ratio has tipped their way. My late mother, dying from a
brain tumor in the bust of the mid-1980s, was desperately trying to keep our
money-losing farm. She used to plead with me: “Some day, land will be precious.
Please, please don’t sell.” Maybe she was right about “some day,” but much of
her efforts went for naught, and the land was sold under duress in the bust,
for about one-sixth of what that land is worth now. The owners of my siblings’
land do not live nearby, but they are gracious people who magnanimously allow
me to venture beyond my own 45-acre remnant and in the evenings walk the
contours of the original farm of my ancestors. But now land is for money, money
is for land — nothing more, nothing less.
4) Another reason for the boomers’
optimism: everything but land and food is bad and almost everywhere but the
U.S. things are even worse off. There is no interest on passbook savings. Urban
real estate is dicey after 2008. When — not if — the soaring
stock market dives is the current betting. Land and the profits it provides are
seen as good investments. The EU and its agricultural subsidies are in
shambles. California’s competitors — mostly Europe’s Mediterranean agriculture
— are bankrupt. India and China need food for their new yuppies. California
agriculture is real: wonderful land, superb weather and climate, innovative
farmers, and adequate water — for now.
5) Most importantly, this boom is
said to be profit-based. The others in the past were more inflation- and
speculation-driven, as hedges for inflation or brief aberrant commodity price
rises. This land rush is supposedly based on bottom-line arithmetic. If almond
orchards are high at $25,000 an acre, so are almond profits: 3,700 pounds per
acre at $3 dollars a pound leads to a theoretical (everything in farming is
theoretical) gross of over $11,000 an acre, and perhaps $7,000-$8,000 an acre
net profit — or a 30% percent return on the investment the first year. (One
local just bragged to me he could pay off his land in four years.) In the old
days, booming land prices were never justified by such highly spiked commodity
prices. I think the fast talkers are drunk who say “buy now at $25,000 an acre
before it goes to $40,000.” But then I confess I thought they were inebriated
two years ago when they were buying orchard at $12,000 an acre.
I want to be mistaken and believe
the boom will only grow, but I have seen too many busts destroy too many lives
of my friends and family. Still, whatever the truth, it is fascinating to
watch, this mad scramble to make lots of money off the land — shysters, crooks,
the audacious, the capable, the noble, the cynical, they are all out here
involved in the way of the forty-niners. The old sandy hill with the half-dead
vineyard down the road? No longer is it marginal land that is either poorly
planted or sandy. So $6,000 an acre is poured into it — and, presto, out goes
the pathetic vineyard and in comes hybrid almonds on computerized drip lines,
overseen by corporate agribusiness experts. Who now cares about its sand,
unleveled ground, and bad location? For investment purposes it is now “a
California almond orchard” and that is all ye need to know.
The Homesteaders?
And how about the old agrarian
ideal? Is the new boom enriching hundreds of thousands of families at last with
money to spruce up their old Victorian clapboard houses on 100 acre ancestral
plots?
Nope. They are all dead, buried,
forgotten. While the successful corporate families are trying to expand, bigger
money is also coming from the outside of agriculture: 401K investment funds,
pension portfolios, insurance profits, safe havens for imperiled euros, or
smart investments for coastal professionals tired of rising taxes and zero
interest. The result is that if in 1970 I knew every family in a two-mile
radius, I don’t know more than 10% of the landowners in my nearest vicinity now.
Heck, I don’t even know if there are any landowners, rather than shareholders
of some investment portfolios.
Stranger still, the land looks
better, not worse, at least in the daylight. A corporate-type lectured me not
long ago for writing an essay on the “Two Californias”: (if I could paraphrase
him: “Your problem is that you chose to spend the night on your land. That’s
dumb to hang out with copper-wire thieves, gang bangers, and the 18%
unemployed. You’re supposed to live in Fresno, visit your land in the daytime
hours, and leave the problems after dark to your foreman and the insurance
company.”
Sort of like Hippo
Regius and the Vandals circa A.D. 430?
Out with the Old, in with the New
Central California is also a magnet
for very rich Punjabis. Their three-story gated castles of 6,000 square feet
are suddenly commonplace. For every copper-wire thief, there is an immigrant
agribusiness man who smiles and says: “No problem. I just got more barbed wire,
more video cameras, more lights” — such an impressive confidence so
characteristic of the immigrants who have always energized America.
The Sikh community arrives with
capital, English, and education — and wishes to become even richer, better
spoken, more highly educated, and more successful. In this nexus, land is not
just a wise investment, but immediate proof of visible, tangible success, in
the manner of the old idea of a landed aristocracy. A Punjabi acquaintance (I
don’t know him well) also sermonized to me: “You guys are played out. You don’t
have kids. If you do, they’ve moved away. You’re not up to it anymore.” He’s
right: the old 19th century immigrant communities — Armenians, Japanese, Scandinavians,
Portuguese — are dying off (if not completely assimilated) and the third
generation mostly sold out and moved on, their plots recombined into latifundia.
(At lectures I meet those in the audience who say, “I grew up in Visalia. We
had a place in Madera.” End of story.) But as I replied to my Sikh
interrogator: “What makes your community exempt from the same forces that saw
the Armenians, the Dutch, and the Swedes leave farming?” Does anyone still
believe in the old idea of labor laboris gratia?
The California Paradox
No one is more upset than I about
the direction of California — valued citizens exiting the state, high taxes,
poor services, terrible public education, substandard infrastructure, contempt
for the law, liberal sermonizing coupled with boutique apartheid, shameless
ethnic identity politics, and public union bullying. But that said, as I’ve written, California is hard to destroy in
a generation. For now, the governor is right that his higher taxes, his
pie-in-sky high-speed rail, the solar and wind cons, the public employee
fiefdoms — all that will continue for the present for three reasons.
Old-fashioned Energy
One, there is a lot of oil and gas
in the Monterey Shale formation. It is located right in the center of the
state, ideal in terms of exploitation and transportation. Drilling off Big Sur
would be one thing, drilling in the scorched, godforsaken West Side foothills,
where nary a Bay Area professor or Santa Monica lawyer has ventured, is quite
another. In Montecito or Lafayette, you can get fined for painting your house
off-pink; out here you can move nine mobile homes behind it, dig some holes for
outhouses, string Romex, create a low-rent compound — and the most regulated
state in the nation becomes the most wild. At some point soon, fracking and
horizontal drilling will start in earnest. The money will flow to ensure
funding for one-third of the nation’s welfare recipients, for the schools that
rank 48th and 49th in the nation, for the unfunded $300 billion in
pension liabilities, for ad hoc, stopgap tinkering on the murderous sections of
the 99 and 101, and for the environmentalists to save the next bait fish in
line.
Techies
Two, you can clone elsewhere Silicon
Valley, but as yet, not quite replace it. Yes, I know Sacramento is taxing
entrepreneurship to death, and forcing relocations to Texas and the like. But
that said, Silicon Valley grew where it did for three reasons and they have not
much changed since my graduate days at Stanford when I saw it take off.
First, the corridor between the
great universities Stanford and UC Berkeley ensured highly educated engineers,
MBAs, lawyers, and professionals in general. Both universities, Stanford
particularly, are doing quite well, and their expertise is now more embedded in
private enterprise than ever, despite the cheap Occupy Wall Street/May Day rhetoric of the student
plazas. Other nearby subsidiaries — UC Davis, UC Santa Cruz, several CSU
campuses, Santa Clara, etc. — serve as satellite multipliers and purveyors of
expertise. Second, the coast that’s nearby Silicon Valley faces an ascendant
Asia, not a dying Europe. That means not just proximity to markets, but a
blending of culture, particularly of highly intelligent and aspiring Asian
professionals and immigrants, and a steady hand on the pulse of Chinese,
Japanese, South Korean, and Taiwanese popular tastes. Third, there is a hip,
cool culture in the Bay Area. I am not too fond of it, given its manifest
hypocrisies that emulate medieval penance and exemption. The more one thirsts
after riches and gives lip service to multiculturalism, the more the
metrosexual hipster decries capitalism and seeks his apartheid world apart from
the logical wreckage of his own ideology.
But I am also not stupid. When I sit
in a café on University Avenue, the energy of the green, the gay, the feminist,
the Obamaized techie, the Facebooker, et al is manifest. That sense
of living in the “right” zip code means that they are willing to buy overpriced
hovels and fork up astronomical prices for pedestrian food. Weird — but weirdly
dynamic all the same. An engineer would rather have his family live in a 1,000
square-foot box in Mountain View than bring them up in a palace in Tulare. Most
simply love Silicon Valley cool as much as much as I am glad to leave it each
week.
Farming Cannot Move
The third and final reason why
California sort of works when it should have gone broke long ago is, of course,
the point of this essay — agriculture. You cannot pull up your pistachio
orchard and transplant it to Texas or start almonds over in the Nevada desert.
Agriculturalists hate what the state is doing to them: a cynical effort to
overregulate, grow inefficient confiscatory government, overtax, and generally
insult the entrepreneur on the cynical theory that farmers are going nowhere
and so should pay bureaucrats a premium for allowing them to profit. And at
$7,000-8,000 an acre profit, Jerry Brown’s high-speed rail, or Solyndra, or the
Voice of Aztlan theatrics are small costs of doing business.
Tech income, oil and gas income, and
farm income are pretty balanced and diverse incomes for the foreseeable future
— and well apart from tourism, Hollywood, Napa Valley, banking, finance, and
construction.
The Weirdest Place in the World
So California is both more poorly
managed than any time in its past, more divided between rich and poor, more
fragmented by opportunistic ethnic identity politics, more impoverished by
massive illegal immigration — and never more naturally wealthy. The other day I
drove through the verdant Central Valley on Manning Avenue. Each acre I zoomed
by is producing thousands of dollars in global profits. At I-5, I looked out at
fracking country, before descending into the land of Facebook, Google, and
Apple — all on mostly poor roads, with terrible drivers and third-world public
rest stops, and now and then passing inferior schools.
California may be in awful
financial, social, civic, and political shape — but it is far, far from broke.
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