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Experts wonder if ethanol is to blame for rising food prices

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By MIMI ABEBE / For the Lincoln Journal Star

Tuesday, Sep 30, 2008 - 06:52:16 pm CDT

On a Sunday evening, Anabel Ostiguin bustled about her small kitchen making dinner for her hungry family.

The 37-year-old mother of six, who moved from Chicago to Lincoln in 1993, placed a stack of chicken-and-cheese quesadillas on a serving plate.

With the sticker shock that greets her on each trip to the grocery store, she struggles to provide even basic food for her family of eight.

Story Photo
Corn in Havana, N.D., about to be sent to an ethanol plant. A quarter of the U.S. corn harvest now goes into ethanol. (Washington Post photo by Michael Williamson.)
Related storiesAbout this series

This ethanol series was researched, written and photographed by eight University of Nebraska-Lincoln journalism students as part of a yearlong class project investigating the pros and cons of corn-based ethanol.

Documentary, forum
  • At 2 p.m. Thursday, the public is invited to view "The Ethanol Maze," a one-hour student documentary that takes an in-depth look at the issues surrounding ethanol.
  • After the film, U.S. Senate candidates Mike Johanns, Scott Kleeb and Steve Larrick will discuss America’s energy policy and where ethanol fits into it.
  • All events are free and will be held at the Ross Theatre, 313 N. 13th St.
  • Copies of the documentary and a 75-page, full-color magazine on the ethanol project will be available for sale in the theater lobby. The magazine and the DVD are $10 apiece or $15 for both. They can also be ordered by calling the College of Journalism and Mass Communications at (402) 472-3041.

So every few months, the Ostiguins make a nine-hour drive from Lincoln to Chicago in their ’98 Chevy Suburban to stock up on tortillas, bought directly from El Milagro, a tortilla maker that offers prices lower than the family can find in Lincoln.

At $15 for a pack of 36 tortillas, they buy a box with 16 packs — enough to last the Ostiguins three or four months.

“We can save more if we buy in bulk,” Anabel said. “With higher prices in everything, we have to limit ourselves.”

Like many other families, the Ostiguins struggle to live on an increasingly tight budget. Cutting corners can go only so far, however, when the price of one of the most basic needs — food — continues to shoot up.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, in 2007, the price of meat, poultry and fish went up by 3.9 percent, dairy products rose by 7.4 percent and eggs skyrocketed 28 percent. In the first quarter of 2008, the price of eggs was up 40 percent from a year earlier.

And all food prices are expected to increase another 4 percent in 2008, according to the USDA.

The price increases have been attributed to several factors, but one has become a lightning rod: ethanol. Specifically, corn-based ethanol.

The boom in the ethanol industry has resulted in a far greater demand for corn, which, in turn, has led to a strain on the supply, triggering higher prices.

A 2007 Iowa State University study on the long-term effects of biofuels in the U.S. was clear in its conclusion: “In response to increased demand for corn by the ethanol sector, feed prices increase and stay high for several years.”

In 2008, ethanol plants were projected to gobble up one-fourth of the nation’s corn supply, leaving less to feed poultry and livestock — and less for the many foods that contain corn.

As much as Americans feel the pain of higher food prices, the global impact is greater. The world’s poor, who spend most of their income on food, have no means to ease the financial burden of food prices. Food riots have occurred in some countries.

“The prices of basic staple foods are likely to increase, threatening economic access to sufficient food, particularly for the poorest who already spend a high proportion of their incomes on food,” said Jean Zeigler, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the right to food. “The sudden, ill-conceived rush to convert food — such as maize, wheat, sugar and palm oil — into fuels is a recipe for disaster.”

In the increasingly contentious food vs. fuel debate, a close look at numerous studies, interviews and government documents reveals a number of key issues, including:

* When the price of corn increases, the price of milk, eggs and meat goes up.

* Baby powder, contact lens solution and cornflakes are among more than 600 corn-based products used in daily life whose prices also are inching upward.

* The overall effect of food-price increases is much more detrimental to the world’s poor than to Americans.

“As oil prices go up, that creates more incentive for producing biofuels which puts pressure on food prices,” said Richard Heinberg, a senior fellow at Post Carbon Institute, a think tank devoted to environmental and energy issues.

Using corn for fuel and other products, he said, inevitably puts pressure on food prices.

Still, not everyone is convinced ethanol is the source of higher food prices.

“The ‘rest of the story’ is that energy prices are a far larger culprit in higher food prices,” Keith Olsen, president of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation, wrote in a July 2007 piece in the Journal Star. “The use of energy adds significant costs to foods as they move through growing, processing, packaging and shipping.

“The bottom line is that the corn-food price link is grossly overstated. The reality is that higher corn prices have had very little impact on food prices. Food prices in general do not rise as much as the media portray.”

Rick Tolman, president of the National Corn Growers Association, put it more bluntly, speaking to the National Press club in April 2008.

“While we do have some role in higher corn prices, we’re closer to Little Bo Peep than an ax murderer,” Tolman said.

This sentiment doesn’t resonate with the Ostiguins, who now spend more than $800 a month on basic food.

“As the kids get older, we consume more and more,” Anabel Ostiguin said. “We have to plan ahead.”

* * * 

Corn has long been a staple in the U.S. food supply.

It is consumed not only by people, but also by cows, hogs and chickens. Beef, milk and eggs are among the most vital items in U.S. meals. The dramatic increase in prices for these and other foods has put pressure squarely on the budgets of American consumers.

Some researchers link those increases to a number of causes, including weather and energy costs. Others have looked at a broad range of possible impacts.

In November 2007, Stanford University published a study titled “The Ripple Effect: Biofuels, Food Security, and the Environment.”

The study’s seven authors considered the impact on food availability and cost if a large percentage of five key food products — maize, cassava, sugar cane, soy and palm oil — was redirected to produce biofuels.

According to the study, the use of these commodities to create fuel could trigger a strain on the supply, leading to higher food prices throughout the world.

Urging more careful analysis of the causes and effects of this trend, the authors wrote, “...biofuels are causing an abrupt increase in demand for agricultural commodities traditionally used for fuel and feed, which is placing upward pressure on crop prices. Whether future price increases and subsequent adjustments in demand and supply occur at local, regional, or global scales has yet to be determined.”

Ken Cassman, University of Nebraska-Lincoln professor of agronomy and agriculture and a co-author of “The Ripple Effect,” echoed the cautious analysis of the Stanford study.

Cassman is critical of studies linking corn-based ethanol to higher food prices. Those studies create a false relationship between the inflation of food prices and rising corn prices, he said.

“There is going to be a higher impact on food prices than these backwards studies suggest,” Cassman said.

* * *

Much of that impact may come from scarcity.

A growing number of farmers have started planting corn instead of wheat — creating a link between ethanol and wheat prices.

“Our grain stocks are at a 30-year low,” said the Post Carbon Institute’s Heinberg, adding that, in the next 50 years, population growth and increases in per capita consumption mean people will have to produce as much food as has been produced in the past 10,000 years.

With skyrocketing wheat and corn prices, that task will be a considerable challenge.

“This is why I think that we’re facing what could be the greatest agricultural crisis in the history of our species,” Heinberg said.

Ethanol Across America, an education campaign of the Clean Fuels Foundation, said higher energy, transportation and labor costs may be to blame for higher food costs.

The industry group said weather can also be involved. Blizzards and ice storms, for example, can cause ranchers to lose cattle and farmers to lose grain, fruit and vegetable crops.

“Weather didn’t have any effect during the last few years, so that can’t explain what’s going on right now,” said Richard Perrin, a UNL agricultural economics professor.

He said current food prices are partially due to higher corn prices, but energy and transportation costs also play a critical role.

“Meat, poultry, eggs and dairy products — the foods where corn is a major input and are most affected by rising corn prices — accounted for about 0.2 percent of the 1.2 percent acceleration in food price inflation between September 2006 and April 2007,” Perrin said.

* * *

Add it all up, and there are nearly 600 uses for corn and corn derivatives. So higher corn prices will likely affect the prices of more items than food.

According to the Kentucky Corn Growers Association, corn is a primary ingredient in Johnson & Johnson baby powders, Duracell Procell batteries, Febreze, Kingsford charcoal and Vagisil Feminine Powder.

And more and more, corn is being used to make ethanol.

A study published in February 2008 by the Economic Research Service Department of the U.S. Department of Agriculture concluded the price increase per bushel of corn from $2 in 2005 to $3.40 in 2007 was due partly to extra demands from ethanol.

The study reported that, by the end of the 2006-2007 crop year, more than two billion bushels of corn — or 19 percent of the harvested crop — was used to produce ethanol, a 30 percent increase from the previous year.

Less than 10 percent of the U.S. corn crop is used for domestic human consumption; the rest goes for things like animal feed and ethanol production, the study said.

Increased costs for corn could be passed on to the consumer.

For example, an 18-ounce box of corn flakes contains about 12.9 ounces of milled corn. The average price of corn for the past 20 years has been $2.28 per bushel, which makes the value of corn in a box of corn flakes about 3.3 cents. The rest of the cost comes from packaging, processing, advertising, transportation and other things.

But when the price of corn hits $3.40 per bushel — the average in 2007 — the value of the corn in that same box is 4.9 cents.

“The 49-percent increase in corn prices would be expected to raise the price of a box of corn flakes by about 1.6 cents … assuming no other cost increases,” the USDA study said.

While consumers are concerned about rising food costs, many corn farmers are pleased with the trend.

In November 2007, the Journal Star ran a pro-ethanol advertisement titled “Food & Fuel Facts.”

“It’s great that Nebraska corn farmers are finally getting a good price for their product,” the ad said. “If we spend a few cents more at the grocery store, that’s a small price for having the safest, most abundant and most affordable food supply in the world.”

But many American families struggle with even moderate price increases.

Big families must be on a budget, said Anabel Ostiguin. Her family goes through five gallons of milk a week and, at most, consumes meat only three times a week because of higher prices.

* * *

Among the pro-ethanol arguments, one of the strongest is that increased corn prices can rejuvenate rural communities by bringing revenue to local farms and farms around the world.

“As a senator from the Cornhusker state, I am acutely aware of the needs of our cattle and pork producers as well as our grain farmers,” Nebraska U.S. Sen. Ben Nelson wrote in the summer 2007 Ethanol Across America Issues Brief.

“It is important to remember that the better corn prices received by farmers help revitalize rural communities while, as this brief shows, having very little effect on the prices consumers pay for food.”

According to others, the international reality is not so simple.

For example, 50 percent or more of the population of Africa derives most of its income from agriculture, Cassman said.

Zambia is a prime example.

About 70 percent of Zambians subsist on agriculture, and the number is higher in rural populations, said Adam Norikane, CCF Zambia Food Security Specialist. Maize (corn) comprises the highest percentage of rural Zambian farmers’ crop lands and yields.

Maize is sold to the Federal Reserve Agency, a government organization, said Norikane, under a policy designed to keep prices steady and offer a sellers’ market, regardless of global price fluctuation. This is the government’s attempt at stabilizing staple-crop production.

“But if the government can’t sell it on the world market, then they can’t pay the farmers, and the farmers have to ask someone they know for money to buy seed for next season,” Norikane said.

Mexican farmers face similar problems.

Poor subsistence farmers don’t usually produce enough to cover all of their household needs, wrote Alder Keleman, Congressional Hunger Fellow and author of “The Mexican ‘Tortilla Crisis’ of 2007,” in which she discusses the future of small-scale, Mexican farmers.

They end up buying maize or maize substitutes, leading to price increases in other food products.

Some experts say the misconception that higher crop prices help farmers is widespread.

“Although increasing food prices should theoretically benefit millions of people working as peasant farmers in developing countries, this is not always the case,” said Jean Zeigler, the UN Special Rapporteur.

“Many farming families are net buyers of staple foods, as they do not have enough land to be self-sufficient, and will therefore be affected by rising consumer prices.”

* * *

On average, Americans spend about 10 percent of their income on food — less in proportion to their disposable income than do people in any other country in the world, Cassman said.

Globally, the picture is much different.

“The figures I’ve seen suggest that the poorest Mexican consumers get something like 60 percent of their daily calories from tortillas, so they have huge nutritional importance,” Keleman said.

In Mexico, the daily minimum wage around the time food prices spiked in 2007 was about 50 pesos, or about $5, Keleman said.

So a price of 10 to 15 pesos per kilo of tortillas could have a huge impact on the food security of a family living off a minimum-wage-level salary.

Ziegler’s UN report summed it up this way: “The consequences of such a rapid increase in food prices would be grave. The International Food Policy Research Institute projects that the number of people suffering from undernourishment would increase by 16 million people for each percentage point increase in the real price of staple food.

“This could mean that 1.2 billion people would be suffering from hunger by 2025.”

Mime Abebe, a Lincoln East graduate, is a senior English and journalism major at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. She wrote this as part a year-long depth reporting class on ethanol.


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SH wrote on September 29, 2008 5:52 am:
" The cost of corn in a box of corn flakes is 4.9 cents. A box of corn flakes at the store is $2.50. Only 2% of the cost is contributed to the price of corn. Transportation and Labor is approximately 60% of the cost. When fuel goes from $2.50 per gallon to over $5.00 there is a greater impact on the cost of production. The livestock producers are the ones that are absorbing the higher cost of corn and losing on their end that saves money at the grocery store. "

Turn this story around... wrote on September 29, 2008 6:29 am:
" If conventional "eco-impact" wisdom holds true, shouldn't we be questioning the family with six kids for putting too much burden on the environment?

Once you've replaced yourselves in the world, you need to take responsibilty for the additional burden, both it's impact on you and the world.

And can it really pay to drive a Suburban to Chicago? It must be the most economical SUV in the country to make that work out.

I'm tired of hearing about how the American farmer and the ethanol industry are the bad guys in the world. The middle east and the other oil producing countries have been getting rich off of the world for years. If the American farmer can finally make a buck, let the do it. I'd rather give them my money any day. "

Chunky Peanut Butter wrote on September 29, 2008 6:39 am:
" Unsubsidized, this is where commidity prices have to be for farmers to breakeven. You want cheap food, you'll have to subsidize the farmers. Did the reporter even bother to check fuel prices used for transportation? This is the real culprit. Besides, #2 yellow corn is not used much as a food ingredient for human consumption, it is feed for livestock. "

Mike in DC wrote on September 29, 2008 7:02 am:
" Food prices have generally stayed the same, and in real money dropped over the last few decades. People in NEB may see this as a problem, but it is a LACK of foresight by Nebraskans that they are not in a better position to reap the benefits of the increased importance of agricultural raw commodities. The value added economy was too thin and thus, very little of the value of the corn crop was seen in Nebraska. So, now that food prices are actually rising in lock-step with inflation, the real cost of food is the same; but because value-added, and raw commodities regularly leave Neb, all that value-added money left with it, and so did the good wages that would have helped many of the smaller city/muni areas in Nebraska. Every American, young and old, infant and senior, has been blessed with over $30,000 dollars in benefits we did not pay for and now have to, how did Nebraska and it's residents smartly leverage and invest that money. Value-added agriculture? DoD-related jobs? Where did it go? "

nah wrote on September 29, 2008 7:20 am:
" Just ask the Corn Growers Asso., ethanol is wonderful. Sure, it is mandated creating an artificial demand. And sure, it is subsidized creating an artificial price. And we do block competition by high tariffs on cheaper non-corn ethanol. But corn prices are really high and that is what ethanol is all about in the end. "

JJ wrote on September 29, 2008 7:47 am:
" I love this article.How stupid do they think we are? When wheat went from $5.00 to 16.00 per bushel, food and all wheat based products went up,nice excuse,but wheat has droped in half to $7.00 per bushel check your stores people.Has the price of bread or any other wheat product went down with it,NO.Corn was as much as $7.50 and is back to around $5.00 which is about a 30% decrease, did all your corn products go down 30%? Instead of talking about something,learn something about it first.Watch the futures
(which is how I make my living)When oil heads up grain goes up with it.The same when it goes down,check the markets over the last 6 months.As long as big oil can keep fooling the simple minds out there I love it. I probably make more money than the farmers do off of grain prices with no investment and so could you if you pulled your head out of the oil barrel.Once the ethanol plants go bust will the oil and gas prices go down NO,will the food prices go down NO.( Can they pay for the gas to go to Chicago for the amount they save? Time for a math class.) "

Farmers daughter wrote on September 29, 2008 7:48 am:
" This article just proves that the cost of transporting food has a lot to do with food costs. The family makes a 9 hour drive in a suburban to save money on tortillas at $15 per 36. Last time I bought tortillas in a local store they were still less than $2 a dozen. They are spending more on transporting tortillas than if they would buy locally. If they like that particular brand, that's great, however, don't use that as an example to say food prices are high because of ethanol. "

Hilda wrote on September 29, 2008 7:50 am:
" Feeding the world has long been the strategic mission of farmers, not competing with the oil industry. When dairy, poultry, corn syrup, and corn oil started to rise in price I had to take a closer look at my family position. We can'tfford to buy beef and pork more than a couple times a month. I can only hope farmers lead a charge in returning the use of their poroducts to feeding people. By the way, I noticed the price of tortillas has changed too, but tortillas we eat are made from white corn, not the yellow feed corn. "

Realist wrote on September 29, 2008 7:56 am:
" It never ceases to amaze me how certain groups always want to zero in one one particular sector to lay all the blame on for a problem. Ethanol is the easy target these days to blame rising food prices on. What about all the other skyrocketing costs that have a impact? All the energy that is burned to get food to the table? All of the other costs, too numerous to mention in this little note, that add up?

The Ethanol program was started for one purpose. To create a market for a crop that produced too much & needed new demand. The intention was to eliminate subsidies for corn production. Creating additional fuel was a item that sure wouldn't hurt anything but, again, it wasn't started for that reason.

You also need to understand there was a reason for subsidies. Grain production consistantly lost money. All you people that bash Ethanol are the same people that bashed subsidies for the farmers. Now Ethanol is a easier target for you to attack. And by the way, subsidies are not for the farmers. They are for everything that the farmers use. Machinery, fertilizer and especially Banks. If we didn't have subsidies, there wouldn't be any loans to farm with. Next time you say something about rich farmers, look around and see who are the ones that are rich. It isn't the farmers, it the ones who use the farmers to get rich. Farming is, and always will be, a high volume, low margin business.

So, here we are. Farmers have had a couple of good years to make a decent profit. Great! It only happens about 2 or 3 years out of 20. Do you understand that based on current input costs, the 2009 crop break even price could be real close to $5 per bushel? Is that Ethanol's fault? I think not & neither is rising food cost the sole fault of it either. "

isotope wrote on September 29, 2008 8:02 am:
" Maybe I'm not up on the price of tortillas, but a round trip to Chicago would cost around $140 (1000 miles, 25 mpg, $3.50 gal), and this isn't taking into account food or misc. expenses or an overnight stay for 18 hours of driving. If they're buying 16 packs @ $15 each, that's a total of $240 worth of tacos. Even if those tacos cost 50% more here in Lincoln ($22.50 for a pack of 36, for a total of $360), they'd be saving money by staying home.

I'm assuming the drive to Chicago to get tortillas coincides with a visit with family and relatives, or the long drive just wouldn't make sense. "

Wait a minute... wrote on September 29, 2008 8:14 am:
" So this lady drops $300 on gas to drive to chicago to buy tortillas at twice the price as they sell at Super Saver in Lincoln? Yep, must be ethanol's fault! "

1.6 cents wrote on September 29, 2008 8:19 am:
" is what corn price increase accounts for in a box of corn flakes. So where is the rest of the money going? Also, pretty biased article when the first 1/4 of the article is negative on ethanol. Why don't we run a story about how a struggling young farmer can now make ends meat instead of selling out? Finally, corn prices have fallen over 25% this year - why doesn't someone ask the question, why hasn't food than dropped if corn is so much responsible? "

Ignignokt wrote on September 29, 2008 8:56 am:
" Just think...Ms. Ostiguin's food bill would only be $400/month if she had stopped reproducing after 3 kids. I'd also like to see the cost benefit analysis of driving clear to Chicago to buy tortillas. Driving from Lincoln to Chicago is about 1050 miles for the round trip. According to fueleconomy.gov, gets 17 miles per gallon on the highway, Ms. Ostiguin burns through 62 gallons of fuel (assuming highway speed the entire drive). Multiplied by about $3.50 per gallon, that's $217 in fuel for the trip. Now, either she's getting one HECK of a deal on tortillas, or she's wasting money and wasting fuel, thereby making the price of food even WORSE.

BTW, just because corn goes into an ethanol plant doesn't mean it's gone forever. Many farmers feed their animals 'distillers', which is the spent corn from the ethanol making process. The starch (sugars) have been consumed, but it is high in protein.

I'm also a bit puzzled about this sudden concern for global starvation, and how it is (by some accounts) the fault of the farmers for selling their corn to ethanol plants. Nobody was all that concerned about the farmers before corn prices came up. For the longest time, the farmers were able to claim "We feed the world", but at the price of corn, many were unable to feed themselves and their families. Now the price of corn is up (as is the price of fuel, which the farmers need to grow food), and the farmers are supposed to sacrifice profits in favor of feeding people in countries where families routinely produce 7-15 children. Does anybody see a relationship here? Maybe the problem in the U.S., and abroad, is not ethanol, but the rate of reproduction. "

get the facts wrote on September 29, 2008 9:08 am:
" why doesn't someone report how many bushels of corn are needed in the US for livestock production? The answer would be around 6 billion bu.,yet farmers produce over 12 billion bu.Without ethanol using up over 4 billion bu.where would this huge surplus go? "

Kenny wrote on September 29, 2008 9:10 am:
" I appreciate the Ostiguin family planning and budgeting, but please no more stories about huge families struggling to make ends meet. Do people not realize that kids cost a lot of money? They eat a lot of food! If you are naive enough to think you can just reproduce at will and be fine, then you deserve this hardship. Even when stuff was cheap, including gas, I find it hard to imagine people having so many kids. I also find it hard to believe that fueling up their Suburban and heading to Chicago to buy tortillas is cost effective, but whatever. "

well wrote on September 29, 2008 9:14 am:
" how much did the study cost? Hell, anyone who buys food could have told you this. The food prices went up at exactly the same time grain was being converted to ethanol. It don't take a (bush) yale education to realize this. Now someone tell me if this family is so broke why are they driving to chicago to buy tortilla shells? Bet i can order them by phone or internet and ship them for a lot less than the gas it takes a 1998 suburban at about 12 mph. You could have picked a better referral than them. How about just a family of 4 who shop at hy vee and have seen the prices go up about 15% in the past year and drive a honda civic. "

wally wrote on September 29, 2008 9:54 am:
" I going to go out on a limb and guess that ethanol isn't the true cause of this family's financial woes. I wonder, do they also drive their SUV to Waverly to fill up with gas so they can save $0.02 a gallon? "

Well sure wrote on September 29, 2008 10:20 am:
" Sure they can save a bundle if they stock up in Chicago with other things
too! I'd drive to Indy and load up with everything and save a bundle. Stay with friends & little food cost. Everything in Lincoln & Nebraska is
double. Sales tax in Indy was 6%. I paid double in Lincoln for a set of
tires than what I paid in Indy. When I lived there I weekly loaded up
with all kinds of fresh food & staples and gave it to the missions. Started that when I moved to Lincoln and in short time said whoooo, I
can't afford doing that in Lincoln!!! There are many many Lincoln people
I know that go to Minn. and K.C. and load up because everything is cheaper! As usual Lincoln's and Nebraska's high taxes drive shopping
out of state, and then the city cries because the sales taxes are down!!!
It's not like Lincoln was way off the beaten path in some far away boon
doggle. Opportunity drives right by Lincoln's front door, AND PAST!!
Kinda like the property taxes in Lincoln, 5 times more than what I paid
in Indy!! "

Nina wrote on September 29, 2008 10:30 am:
" One must assume this lady goes to Chicago for other reasons, and buys tortillas while she's there. Otherwise, the cost of going to Chicago could take years of a few cents' difference between tortilla prices. Five gallons of milk per week is a lot, so some cost could be saved there by mixing a gallon of milk with a gallon of milk made from powdered milk. By mixing the two, the flavor is still nice and the price is much lower. Meat can be used as an ingredients, rather than as a main dish, to enable having it more often. Make soups, casseroles (not store-bought hamburger helper, which is very expensive when compared to homemade), and use eggs and beans for protein often. Tuna is very reasonable, so is pork and turkey. One can buy a whole turkey, roast it and dice the meat, freezing it in 2-cup baggies. It's handy, very reasonable, and will stretch far. Even local farmers don't raise all they need - few have livestock any more, and buy the same meats all others do. More of them make up the difference by having a garden, though, and fruit trees. The best foods are still homegrown or homemade - cheapest, too. "

clarence wrote on September 29, 2008 11:02 am:
" WHAT HIGH FOOD PRICES???? What happened to gardening? Many nights when we sit down for dinner, the only items on the table that were purchased from a grocery store were the meats and the spices. All the rest came from our Nebraska garden. Now gradening is a lot of work but the benefits of exercise, enjoyment and fresh produce are great. "

Sick and Tired wrote on September 29, 2008 11:57 am:
" I'm tired of reading comments where people complain about people having large families. Yes, it is difficult to support a large, growing family but that does not mean that any of these commentors have a right or responsiblility to comment on the size of anyone's family.
Children grow up.
Children, if raised properly, become adults who will contribute to society.
Those adults will pay taxes and contribute to society and possibly take care of YOU when you are elderly and in a nursing home because your non-existent children will not take care of you.
Therefore, the more responsibly raised children we have in this world that become good, responsible, adults the better. "

Ej wrote on September 29, 2008 12:33 pm:
" So why is an ear of sweet corn .49 at supersaver today? you can't tell me it hasn't impacted food prices. "

D wrote on September 29, 2008 12:45 pm:
" Agreed!!! We too have a very large garden this year an since mid june we have yet to buy any vegetables/fruits at the supermarket. Everyone just complains to complain anymore and doesn't step up and do something about their financial situation themselves. I remember when "victory" gardens were a domestic rallying cry for what the common person could do to help with the war (ww II). Now in these tough times it should be common practice. "

TGS wrote on September 29, 2008 1:45 pm:
" Maybe we should all do each other a favor, and stop having so darn many kids. At some point, we'll have more mouths to feed than there is food availabe, regardless of how much ethanol we make. Starvation will ultimately control population growth, but it won't be pretty, so maybe we should start now. "

DN wrote on September 29, 2008 3:58 pm:
" If you really look at the atrticle I can see that farmers are not getting near enough for a bushel of corn. What else can you think of that can be used 600 different ways? All you corn subsidy and eathonal bashers better think twice and thank a farmers for bieng so efficient to provide you with such an awsome crop that can be used so many ways! "

Hey Ej wrote on September 29, 2008 4:40 pm:
" Sweet corn is to field corn as green beans are to soybeans. There's no connection! They're a completely different variety of crop for a completely different purpose. You don't make Ethanol from sweet corn and a bite from an ear of field corn wouldn't taste too good. "

LS wrote on September 29, 2008 4:45 pm:
" Enough comments have been recorded about the foolishness of driving a 12 mpg Suburban 1000 miles to save $100 on several boxes of tortillas that I will not offer further explanation. 2007 corn production, 2007 corn exports and 2007 corn carry-over are at record levels not withstanding the corn used for ethanol production. Market forces drove the price of corn upward, partly fueled by speculation. The same speculators drove the market down by 1/3. Little, if any, of the corn consumed by livestock or ethanol is used in the making of tortillas. It will be necessary to identify some other culprit as the real factor for the high price of tortillas. "

JHL10 wrote on September 29, 2008 4:51 pm:
" 523 miles to Chicago one way, 1046 miles round trip (maps.Google.com). 1998 Chevrolet Suburban gets 17 miles to the gallon (US Government figures). The cheapest gas you can get in Chicago right now is about $3.79 (Chicagogasprices.com). If Professor Fowler would check the math I believe that comes to $233.20, for fuel cost only. 576 tortillas for $240.00, almost 42 cents a tortilla, add the gas and you have almost doubled the price. I can get a tortilla with “three different cheeses melted to perfection” heated, individually wrapped, bagged, score some napkins and hot sauce for less than that (tacobell.com) and I don’t have to spend two days on the road, pay any tolls, or put over a thousand miles of wear and tear on my vehicle. Those must be some pretty fantastic tortillas. Super Saver sells a 30 pack of corn tortillas for $1.87. "

whatever wrote on September 29, 2008 6:33 pm:
" I wish I was so poor that I couldn't make it unless I drove to Chicage in my Suburban to pick up my tortilla shells. If this is typical of the average American trying to save a buck then there is absolutely no hope. As for ethanol if McCain wins the game is up. If Obama wins probably not as he will in large measure owe his election due to the "backing of ethanol". Obama needs Minnesota and Iowa to win and ethanol is big up there. McCain will owe NOTHING politically to the ethanol industry. Also keep in mind that Palin owes her political career to Big Oil. We all know where Big Oil stands on ethanol. But of course rural Nebraskans by the 100,000 of thousands will again vote against their own economic well being and select McCain as their choice for president. "

Planarian Fan wrote on September 29, 2008 6:36 pm:
" Well, tortillas are a lot tastier than tube socks. "

Chris wrote on September 29, 2008 8:01 pm:
" Those tortillas must have gold flecks in them or something! Wow. "

D. Sweat wrote on September 29, 2008 8:18 pm:
" I am disappointed that eight UNL journalism students couldn't produce a realistic example of food costs. The Anabel Ostiquin fiasco is an unrealistic tale. Maybe an economics student should be included in the group. The eight students lost their credibility in the first five paragraphs. "

Rod S wrote on September 30, 2008 4:24 am:
" Don't you think that just maybe with the Rising price of Crude Oil does directly effect the cost of Food at the supermarket. For example lets look at a jug of milk, not the milk but the PLASTIC JUG and i quote "Crude oil at $110 a barrel might soon start affecting the cost of disposable diapers. Or plastic milk jugs. Or hundreds of other household goods in which petroleum is an ingredient." complements of StarTribune.com April 10 2008..http://www.startribune.com/business/17487034.html

Plus the Fuel that was used to transport the Product(milk) from the dairy farmer to the processing plant, and the Fuel that was used to Transport the empty Milk jugs to the processor. Then the added cost of fuel used to ship the milk to the supermarked. Can anyone say Petrolum ? And That is just one Item... Look at Soda Bottles. I could make a shorter list of Products that DON'T use Plastic. Also How hard is it to look at the price and the Price of crude oil today and Compare it to the Months of May, June or July. Food Prices have come down.. If ethanol was the Big Baddy the prices would still be high. Right ?? "

Amy wrote on September 30, 2008 8:55 am:
" "Well sure," everything in Lincoln is NOT double in price...what a horrible exaggeration/fallacy. 6% sales tax isn't much better than 7%! You just have to know where to look to find good deals.

And thank you, Kenny. No more stories about huge families that are broke! You created your own problem! "

Rod S wrote on September 30, 2008 11:29 am:
" Don't you think that just maybe with the Rising price of Crude Oil does directly effect the cost of Food at the supermarket. For example lets look at a jug of milk, not the milk but the PLASTIC JUG and i quote "Crude oil at $110 a barrel might soon start affecting the cost of disposable diapers. Or plastic milk jugs. Or hundreds of other household goods in which petroleum is an ingredient." complements of StarTribune.com April 10 2008..http://www.startribune.com/business/17487034.html

Plus the Fuel that was used to transport the Product(milk) from the dairy farmer to the processing plant, and the Fuel that was used to Transport the empty Milk jugs to the processor. Then the added cost of fuel used to ship the milk to the supermarked. Can anyone say Petrolum ? And That is just one Item... Look at Soda Bottles. I could make a shorter list of Products that DON'T use Plastic. Also How hard is it to look at the price and the Price of crude oil today and Compare it to the Months of May, June or July. Food Prices have come down.. If ethanol was the Big Baddy the prices would still be high. Right ?? Also the United States has always had a cheap food policy. Oh there is a difference in the type of corn, like chunky peanut butter said, Maybe those UNL students can look up "Food Grade Corn" thats what is used in corn chips and not in Ethanol production. How do i know this well I'm a farmer. Also Food grade corn is what you call a premimun product. In other words you get paid more for it than Feed grade corn. "

Nina wrote on September 30, 2008 12:24 pm:
" Indeed, sweet corn and field corn do not taste the same, and are not used the same. When I was a kid and the neighbor's cows got into our sweet corn patch, we instead ate fresh field corn and mom put sugar into the cooking water to help the taste. We replanted the patch and had real sweet corn later in the summer. That was called 'making do.' Here's a 'make-do' idea I devised that we actually like better than the original that was more expensive - this might help the tortilla lady: For tacos, burritos, etc. instead of using all hamburger, brown a pound of it, drain, add a can of refried beans, and a can of mushroom soup (look in the $1 aisle and get the brand selling for 50 cents a can). Stir together and fill tacos. Cheaper, better for you and easy solution to serve 8 on just one pound of meat. "

Ej wrote on September 30, 2008 12:25 pm:
" to hey ej- Farmers are going to grow what makes money-meaning a smaller supply of sweet corn-meaning more expensive sweet corn. "

mitchy_v wrote on September 30, 2008 3:21 pm:
" Spend $300 in gas to save $50 on tortillas? Smart! "

Such a lie wrote on September 30, 2008 7:19 pm:
" Fuel goes up to....food goes up, Aquilla goes up, LES goes up 9.1% (but I got my bill, actually was 15%-liars), health insurance,you name it. Fuel goes down which was the excuse...everything stays the same. So they had to raise stuff to offset fuel prices and now they will be making big bucks, the same goes here. Such liars, sell your condo on your vacation island Mr CEO and try reality, you think we are stupid??? "