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Don,
Here are some data to ponder: - FOOD: The overall economics of the food industry right now is that 9 cents of every dollar spent at the supermarket goes to the farmer, while 67 cents goes to marketing, advertising, refrigeration, transportation, and middle people (the rest goes to inputs). Direct marketing agreements between farmers and consumers, therefore, bring the price of food way down. Hence the explosive growth of community supported agriculture (CSAs). There are now more than 600 CSAs in North America. The bottom line of the food sector is that we have very efficient farms and increasingly inefficient distribution. - WOOD: The place to find diminishing economies of scale is with reuse and recycling operations. A specific example, noted by Paul Hawken: The Menominee Indians have selectively harbested trees on their land, and sold them profitably, for 150 years. Today, after sales of 2 billion board-feet of wood, their forest remains as healthy an ecosystem as it was in the 1850s, with 25 percent MORE harvestable trees. - WATER: That water utilities are gradually being replaced by Water Efficiency Service Companies suggests changes in the economy of scale. The tasks involved in water efficiency -- finding and plugging leaks in plumbing, developing better ways to capture rainwater, implementing more efficient appliances and fewer lawns -- all are best done locally. - BANKING: I think you need to question whether mergers are prima facie evidence of larger economies of scale for banking, or merely an indication of an unfortunate coincidence between the interests of short-term shareholders of the acquired company and the CEO of the acquiring company. Most of the studies I've seen, including those done by the Fed, have concluded that local and regional banking tends to have -- compared with national or global banks -- lower overheads, higher returns on savings, lower fees on checkings, lower interest charges on credit cards, and lower default rates. There are lots of other sectors where this is happening as well: in energy, where generation capacity is being taking over by conservation (through local energy service companies) and by regional windmills and by rooftop photovoltaics; in the service sector, where people's desire for personalize service sets a limit on what the impersonalized internet can provide; even in the manufacturing sector, where automakers are looking serious at small-scale, modularized construction as allowing more just-in-time delivery to niche markets. Even Paul Krugman winds up his book on POP INTERNATIONALISM noting the growing localization of our economy. This is good news for community economics. Why resist it? --- Michael H. Shuman (Village Foundation) "Donald R. Hinkle" wrote: > Can you give me examples of shrinking economies of scale in food? I am only aware of > consolidation in the grociery industry. And in water utilities? I am not aware of any > new small neighborhood operators. Home Improvement and Lumber also seem to be > increasing size to effect economies of scale. Finance/Banking.......I also have not > seen anything but consolidation. This post transferred from the cdb-l mailing list |