Across the West, the foundational class, farmers, ranchers, and other agricultural producers, are on the decline. Western nations are facing a rapid shrinkage in rural economies, farmed land, and youth uptake of agriculture. At the same time, food prices are skyrocketing, farm holdings are being consolidated by larger and larger landholders, and the market is geared increasingly toward financialization and export rather than feeding the nation(s).
On top of these trends, the claims of the agricultural lobbies and political class about the necessity of migrants in doing agricultural work is helping to fuel the Great Replacement and locking Western workers out of entire sectors of the economy. Neoliberal and globalist policies have failed Western nations, harmed much of the rest of the world, and are used as one of the primary drivers of demographic change in wealthier Western nations. Nationalists must present their people(s) with an alternative vision of the agricultural sector and rural economies, and be armed with the facts necessary to push back against the advocates of the current paradigm.
The Current Situation:
Farmers are aging and native demographics are under threat. In the United States some 95% of agricultural producers are White and the average age of these farmholders is 57.5 years old, more than a third are already older than 65 years old. Within a decade more than half of America’s farmers will be older than 65, and the situation is not much better in the rest of the West. In Britain, the average farmer is 60 years of age and over 40% have already surpassed the age of 65.
Continental Europe is no better, with farmers in the Westerly nations of the continent skewing near the age of 60 with few exceptions, save the highly innovative Netherlands which has a much younger farmer on average.
Young people, particularly the male backbone of the life, are not being drawn into a sector where they are not only vital but foundational.
Under the current global system food is a financial commodity first, and life sustaining nourishment second. In the modern finance-driven-capitalist system, the neoliberal system, agricultural land and food itself have become financial commodities which are traded by banks and hedge funds such as Goldmann Sachs and Blackrock.
In Europe pension funds invest billions of Euros of retirees money into the agriculture market which results in increased prices for food and agricultural products. These very price increases, which the pension funds profit from, then effect the pensioners who are invariably told the fund simply “cannot afford” to increase their benefits.
The financialization of the agriculture and food commodities markets has already contributed to one major crisis, the 2008 food price crisis, which saw investors hold onto billions of tons of agricultural products as they watched prices increase and their profits shoot through the roof.
Speculative capital ran riot with the global food supply.
The food we eat, particularly here in the West and in the developing world, is held hostage by rapacious middlemen who chase profit for themselves at the expense of both farmer and the population.
These same profiteers and speculators use their corporate wealth to ensure that mass immigration to the West continues apace. In May of 2023, the Republican-controlled House of Representatives passed a law to mandate e-verify, but with cutouts so broad that the legislation, which died in the Senate, would have proven useless even if it passed. A last-minute amendment created an exception for agricultural workers, most of whom are foreign-born.
The agricultural lobby, which spends nearly $50 million a year in Washington, cannot be allowed to determine the economic and demographic destiny of the United States. Not least because the agricultural corporations paying for these lobbyists are not owned by the average American farm holder, but are more representative of Corteva Agriscience. Corteva is a major agricultural chemicals producer who even goes so far as to produce a podcast that advocates for mass immigration to the United States.