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A properly touching Christmas story. It’s made my day.


best tool name ever


Most definitely. I wish I could foresee a time when the people growing the crop are the ones who mainly benefit from it. But, I doubt it.


In the US that's exactly the case. The difference? The ability to view and interact with the commodities and insurance markets.

> I wish

No need to wish, instead give farmers cell phones, commodities trading websites localized to their language, and bank accounts.


No actually, the vast majority of those farmers got priced out of the business, or "outcompeted", or aggressively bought by a megacorp farm.

Very few family farms still exist. I know one from northern Maine, and they sure as hell don't seem to do better when potato prices go up, because well, they don't have any potatoes to sell when potato prices are up, because potato prices are up when they don't have any potatoes to sell!


> In the US that's exactly the case

> No need to wish, instead give farmers cell phones

The people doing the farming in the USA are rarely the people who make money from the farms.

Some people like to throw out the fact that almost 90% of farms in America are small (<$350,000/year) family-owned and operated farms. But that 90% of farms accounts for only 20% of total farm production, and over 90% of their household-income came from non-farming activities (spouse working other job = 90% of household income for small farms).

The ~5% of farms which are the largest farms account for about 60% of gross farm production in the USA. These few farms employ about 2 million hired farmhand laborers - generally you won't see the farm owners doing fieldwork.


It depends on the crop. Corn and soybeans are massively mechanized so you need very little labor so often it is the farm owners doing the fieldwork.


Iowa is seeing a “disappearing middle” due to farm consolidation - small farms are staying about the same but the largest farms are growing in size by eating medium sized farms.

Currently 50% of Iowa farmland is owned by the 8.7% of farms that are large enough it would take between 20 days to 6 months to harvest with a single combine (the 200 very largest farms are 7700 acres on average, a combine harvests 50-75 acres of corn per day). Some of these farms you’d likely want 10+ combines to harvest corn in the peak window.

So these farms are looking at $10-100 million in farmland alone, and another $1-10 million in combines.

An acre of Iowa cornfield costs $11,400 and yields $170-350 profit per acre depending on the year. Profits are on the low end right now. So the smaller “large farms” that start at 1,000 acres would be expected to earn a profit of $170,000-350,000 per year on $10 million of land.

https://www.thegazette.com/agriculture/2022-ag-census-five-t...

https://www.nass.usda.gov/Publications/AgCensus/2022/Full_Re...

https://www.farmprogress.com/crops/iowa-farm-margins-tighten


If I was you, I would think about Ontology. They are working on some really cool stuff related to be able to query multiple data sources as if they were one (much much more than this of course) and they are based in Kings Cross, London. I would imagine that their salaries reflect the kind of work that they do. If I was looking for a job similar to you I would be contacting them.


I'll check them, thanks!


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