Thursday, May 17, 2012

Growing Wealth & The Lingering Unexpected Domestic Food Crisis



It’s not that the economy is failing – what is happening is wealth is being spread-out.


 If the Mayan calendar ends up being false – the next decade should look like the following:


a.  Wealth continues to spread-out across continents and creates ever growing emerging middle classes

b.  These new middle classes quickly realize they can afford quality goods and services

c.  A lot of the highest quality products on the planet continue to come from America

d.  Americans begin to realize the rest of the world ‘exists’ and wants their goods/services

e.  Americans discover how to export via groups like Grovara (www.grovara.com) teaching them how and assisting in partnership creation

f.  Americans begin to prefer selling their products outside of the US because higher profit margins, more opportunity, less competition

g.  American manufacturing 2.0 - BOOM again

h.  Cheap & automated manufacturing facilities cause American unskilled labor to go the way of farming back in the 1920’s - with the invention of the tractor

i. Prices of products domestically Sky-Rocket as supply lessons to sales in newly opened markets – taking preference over domestic inventories

j.  First market category to enter “Global Consumption Bubble” will be Human Consumed Food Products - Prices Sky-Rocket.

k.  America experience a food crisis –  situation lasts 3-5 years until regulations and export tariffs are enacted to ensure supplies are managed according to domestic priorities

l.  America WILL create new skilled job markets as there will become an extremely large demand for tech-savy, customer service oriented, multi-lingual individuals, who have an understanding of marketing, and global sales experience

m.  Unskilled and uneducated labor will be a big problem in America – but most will adapt to survive and will realize that they are going to have to ‘do the jobs that they feel like they are not entitled to be doing’ – busing tables, picking fruit, etc…

1 comment:

_ said...

I don't entirely disagree, but your analysis fails to take into account a few things.

First, this country has an enormous surplus of both corn and soy.

Second, if corn and soy demand skyrocketed internationally, the government could free up monies used to support the farming industry and target other areas of need.

Third, many raw foods (fruit & veg) would not survive export to other countries, who will not take them en masse by modes of transportation needed to ensure that they don't spoil (e.g., air).