lman
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2009
- Messages
- 2,376
- Location
- Indiana
- Tractor
- New Holland 3040, New Holland 1530, Oliver 1850
I grew up on a corn, soybean and hog farm. Unfortunately we and farmers in general didn't set the price of our commodities. That is one reason why we wound up selling the farm. Farmers are required to produce more and more to make a profit and the price of fuel is one more factor that will break them. It doesn't even sound like you have a business so you only know what your boss tells you or you read.I absolutely understand what an increase in fuel prices can do to someone with a business that relies on fuel. You have to pass the cost on to the customer, the customer can't afford it or won't pay, etc... and down goes your profit margin. If it gets to the point you're not making enough to cover operating expenses, you're done. I do understand that. I worked at a newspaper for 30 years. Our biggest expense besides people was newsprint. The prices fluctuated wildly, and similarly to fuel and refineries, paper mills would go off-line for various reasons like supply of timber, or glut of paper on the market, international trade wars, trucker strikes.... if we passed the cost on to the customer, they'd stop buying the product. Some years there was no profit. Well, you know the shape of the newspaper industry today. Going, going, almost gone.
Good luck to you.
I have also noticed that with the price of fuel goes inflation and I suspect that will be next.