By Nancy Matthis | Saturday, December 16th, 2006 at 6:54 pm
Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce the cost of food, or of any other goods and services, to the taxpayer. Illegal immigration also increases those costs.
In fact, illegal immigration increases the citizen’s financial burden in exactly the same ways and using the same types of governmental mechanisms as the inefficient and ill-conceived government subsidy programs. Let’s just look at the numbers. The available data points come from different years, so our results will not be specific for any single year, but will be representative of the general problem.
Note: This article responds to two comments made by liberals on earlier articles in our Illegal Immigration series.
- Joe Budzinski referenced our report on The Crider Case on Nova Townhall Blog. Over there, they play host to a token liberal, Stay Puft Marshmallow Man. Stay Puft took it upon himself to publish a response, We Can’t Ignore Agriculture, featuring Critique of American Daughter.
“….farmers work on very tight profit margins. They can’t pay more. If they paid higher rates, the cost of producing a crop would exceed its market value.
The only way to increase wages in these sorts of jobs would be to increase government subsidies even more (make tax payers pay for the wage increases), or let food prices shoot up (make consumers pay)
both of these options seem untenable. In the later case, the negative economic consequences could be more severe than anything brought on by the recent influx of immigrants….
We need this stuff, but in today’s economy it isn’t profitable without being propped up with tax dollars. Last year, we put over 16 billion dollars into these subsidies. “
- The Word-Drum took a shot at our friend Doyle, when he cross-posted our article Illegals Deadlier Than War On Terror on his weblog A Cool Change. As you can see, the fellow who left the comment cannot spell any better than he can do math.
“As a Vegitarian American (Democrat) I resent having to pay the kind of prices for lettuce that would occur if we did something about illegals. It’s Bush’s fault anyway.”
Both of these fellows believe in the incorrect “manna from heaven” theory of government assistance. It is an item of religious faith with liberals that we will deconstruct in the following discussion.
Update — It is likely that the second comment was meant as a joke. The sad fact is that most liberals are so divorced from reality that it sounded like an authentic liberal response. And we are pretty certain that the first commenter really believes in his logic. As our contributor [Bad Moon Rising] likes to say, “They walk among us. And they vote.”
The average expenditure for food per person in the United States in 2005 was $3,452 (source).
The average annual agricultural subsidy in the United States between 1996 and 2002 was $16 billion (source).
The population of the United States recently passed the milestone of 300 million (source).
So, if the value of the agricultural subsidy were applied to reduce the cost of food (it actually is not intended to do that and does not do that, but we’ll get to that later) it would amount to a benefit of $53.34 per person.
If the subsidy had the effect of benefiting the citizen, it would represent a savings of:
But wait just one minute! That $16 billion agricultural subsidy budget did not come, as liberals would have us believe, as manna from heaven. IT CAME OUT OF THAT SAME CITIZEN’S POCKET IN THE FIRST PLACE. Does that mean that he just broke even? No. Not even close.
In order to implement an agricultural subsidy program, the government had to maintain pro rata segments of
- the Internal Revenue Service to extract the tax money from that poor hapless citizen
- the Department of Agriculture to study the situation and distribute the funds
- the General Accountability Office to audit everyone’s books
- the General Services Administration to provide all those agencies with buildings, utilities, and services
- the legislative, executive, and judicial arms of government to create, administer, and judge such a program
Like a bad charity, government provides only fractional benefits in return for the resources it consumes. Our poor taxpayer will be very lucky to pay only a few hundred dollars for his apparent $53.34 benefit. So instead of saving him 1.55% on his food bill, the interference of the government likely costs him an extra three to four percent.
But that is assuming the government intended to help John Q. And that was never the intention. Agricultural subsidies have traditionally been used to pay farmers to let some of their fields lie fallow, so that overall they produce less, and prices remain high. Another use for subsidy funds has been to buy up the surplus of overproduced commodities and store it in government repositories, again so that prices remain high. These subsidies were originally introduced to buy the farm vote. Nowadays they are earmark payoffs for a few big factory farms, another form of big business.
Bottom line: John Q. the food consumer is being taxed to provide the funds that government uses to increase his costs.
The situation with illegal immigration is analogous. As it factors into the price of food, illegal immigration can be viewed as an additional agricultural subsidy administered and financed by government.
The farmer’s cost of food production in the United States amounts to about 20% of the consumer’s cost (source). The value of his crop land is determined by the real estate sector. The cost of equipment — tractors, harvesters, whatever — evokes names like Case, Caterpillar, John Deere, Massey Ferguson. A tractor is a tractor, a fixed capital cost. To make the case for the lower cost of illegal labor, one has to look at the systems in place for delivering food to the consumer, the other 80% — including pickers, processors, packers, the employees in fast food chains, etc.
So will reducing the cost of labor in the food delivery pipeline save John Q. some percentage of his per capita annual food consumption costs?
Dispassionate analyses of the costs of illegal immigration are hard to find. One scholarly study was completed in 1997 by Dr. Donald Huddle, Professor Emeritus of Economics at Rice University. Based on 1996 data, he estimated the NET cost of illegal immigration to the federal budget at $24.44 billion. Extrapolated to 2006, through increases in the number of illegals and inflation, that becomes at least $70 billion this year (source).
Most of the organizations advocating for sensible immigration policy use this figure, which represents the cost to the government’s budget, and note that this amounts to
But wait just one minute! That $70 billion illegal alien subsidy budget did not come, as liberals would have us believe, as manna from heaven. IT CAME OUT OF THE US TAXPAYER’S POCKET. It was collected and administered and redistributed by the same inefficient charity — the US government — as the other agricultural subsidy. So to wind up with $70 billion in the federal budget to lavish on our law-breaking uninvited guests, our government had to extract many times that amount from us. You remember — to pay for the IRS, the GAO, the GSA, the USDA, the three branches, and oh yes for pro rata segments of the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services (remember our bankrupted emergency rooms), Justice (recall the illegals’ disproportionately high percentage in the federal pens), etc.
Now we see that we are approaching a substantial portion of John Q.’s food budget. In fact, it has been estimated that illegal labor reduces the price of a head of lettuce about two cents. You’d have to eat a very great deal of lettuce to make this worthwhile.
Does anyone make out? Well, if you are the sort who spends a lot on maids to clean your house, gardeners to tend your lawn, perhaps a nanny and a chauffer, maybe yes. For example, if you can save $10 per hour on a maid who works for you one day a week (say $15 per hour instead of $25 per hour), you will save
And if you can shave a similar amount off the wages of a gardener who fine-tunes your boxwood and manicures your grass one day per week (say $25 per hour instead of $35 per hour), you can double your savings.
These wages are the going rates in the DC suburbs where our lawmakers have their posh dwellings. Throw in the Hispanic nanny who tends the little ones 48 hours per week while you are at work, and this becomes very attractive.
So the “Tijuana express” IS benefiting the folk who are responsible for keeping the underground railroad running. But let’s be honest. This is not about the price of lettuce.
For an overview of our government’s history of disastrous meddling in the agricultural economy, read Agricultural Subsidies in the HighBeam Encyclopedia here.
Previous articles in our Illegal Immigration series:
The Crider Case
Illegals Deadlier Than War On Terror
Going By The Numbers
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25 Responses to “The Price Of Lettuce”

December 16th, 2006 at 9:36 pm
One needs look no further than OPEC for a lesson in marketing. They do not raise the price of oil by increasing the supply. With the surfeit of food and milk on the market, farmer’s prices at wholesale aren’t going up.
Subsidies merely raise the price at the retail level, since corporations pay no taxes and pass through costs.
December 18th, 2006 at 10:09 am
Guard the Borders Blogburst 12/18/06
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast. The Price of Lettuce Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce the cost of food, or of any
December 18th, 2006 at 10:11 am
Guard the Borders Blogburst: Dec 18 06
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast.
The Price of Lettuce
Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce the cost of food, or of any other goods and…
December 18th, 2006 at 10:13 am
Guard the Borders Blogburst: Dec 18 06
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast.
The Price of Lettuce
Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce the cost of food, or of any other goods and…
December 18th, 2006 at 10:15 am
Guard The Borders Blogburst 12-18-06
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast.
The Price of Lettuce
Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce the cost of food, or of any other goods and servi…
December 18th, 2006 at 10:29 am
Guard The Border Blogburst
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast.
The Price of Lettuce….
December 18th, 2006 at 10:52 am
The Price of Lettuce
Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce the cost of food, or of any other goods and services, to the taxpayer. Illegal immigration also increases those costs.
December 18th, 2006 at 12:31 pm
Guard The Borders Blogburst
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast. The Price of Lettuce Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce the cost of food, or of…
December 18th, 2006 at 12:38 pm
Illegal Immigration and the Price of Lettuce
This is a great GTB blogburst. It knocks down farm subsidies and illegal immigration in farming in a single shot!
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast.
The Price of Lettuce
Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the …
December 18th, 2006 at 12:44 pm
Guard The Borders Blogburst
Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce the cost of food, or of any other goods and services, to the taxpayer.
…
December 18th, 2006 at 12:57 pm
[...] (By Nancy Matthis at American Daughter. Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast.) [...]
December 18th, 2006 at 1:10 pm
Guard the Borders Blogburst
By Nancy Matthis at American Daughter
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast.
The Price of Le…
December 18th, 2006 at 1:11 pm
Guard the Borders Blogburst
By Nancy Matthis at American Daughter
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a …
December 18th, 2006 at 1:36 pm
The Price of Lettuce
This week’s Guard the Borders Blogburst was written by our good friend Nan of American Daughter. It’s especially noteworthy for NVTH readers because it references: 1) lettuce; 2) one of our posts on immigration, and; 3) one of our other…
December 18th, 2006 at 2:27 pm
GTB Blogburst
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast. The Price of Lettuce Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce the cost of food, or of any
December 18th, 2006 at 4:09 pm
Guard the Borders Blogburst
By Nancy Matthis at American Daughter
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast.
The Price of Lettuce
Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce …
December 18th, 2006 at 4:26 pm
[...] The Price of Lettuce By Nancy Matthis at American Daughter [...]
December 18th, 2006 at 8:18 pm
Guard The Borders Blogburst
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast.
The Price of Lettuce
By Nancy Matthis at American Daughter
Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce…
December 18th, 2006 at 10:02 pm
Guard the Borders Blogburst
By Nancy Matthis at American Daughter
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast.
The Price of Lettuce
Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce the c…
December 19th, 2006 at 1:00 am
In my own defense, I don’t think I’ve ever argued that ag. subsidies were anything but the taxpayers’ money being used to prop up what would otherwise be an uncompetitive industry.
I’ve been going on about these subsidies on this blog for some time now. My point has been that they create a market distortion which effectively creates more migration from Mexico to the US.
The point I’ve tried to make has Not been that they save the taxpayers money, nor has it been that they represent a huge portion of the budget.
lastly, the $70 billion annual costs figure is debatable. Pew Hispanic and the National Research Council have both put out studies showing that undocumented workers contribute more in taxes than they consume in services.
No matter how honest the people conducting studies try to be, there are always going to be differing results based on what they’re looking at and the ways those studies are set up. However, this, “liberals would have us believe” rhetoric is not helpful in facilitating a dialogue, or getting to the bottom of the issue.
December 19th, 2006 at 1:17 am
Guard the Borders Blogburst
Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast.
By Nancy Matthis at American Daughter The Price of Lettuce Federal subsidies do not reduce the COST of food to the taxpayer. They increase it. Likewise, illegal immigration does not reduce t…
December 19th, 2006 at 8:02 am
[...] By Nancy Matthis at American Daughter Today’s Blogburst is also available as a Podcast. [...]
December 19th, 2006 at 10:56 am
[...] This is this week’s Guard the Borders Blogburst. It was written by By Nancy Matthis at American Daughter [...]
January 3rd, 2007 at 1:09 pm
[...] The Crider Case Illegals Deadlier Than War On Terror Going By The Numbers The Price Of Lettuce getSphereItResults(’inline_sphereit’) ; [...]
January 4th, 2007 at 11:42 am
Stats, of course, are war by other means. No matter what, the pro-illegals will push their stats. Guess which the vote-grubbing Dems, hustling hispanics, AND the grubbing Republicans (certainly the powerful globalistas), will back, finance, counsel, advocate, spin and sentimentalize?