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Additional Application from 1992 to 2003 the Number of Milk Producers in Producers

question 73

Multiple Choice

Additional Application
From 1992 to 2003 the number of milk producers in Florida has fallen from 300 to 190.In those same 10 years the number of dairy farms nationwide has decreased by more than 44,000.Why? The market price in a perfectly competitive industry is not determined by the individual sellers,but rather the market supply and demand.While the Florida dairy industry might not be "perfectly" competitive due to the certain USDA policies,its behavior does approximate one.If prices are not high enough to maintain some level of normal profit,firms will leave the industry.And this is what has been happening in the dairy industry.In the months after September 11,2001 the demand for milk fell,causing the price of 100 pounds of milk to decrease from about $19 to about $14,a 25-year low.In addition to falling prices,the costs of operating dairy farms have risen.Increased property taxes and environmental compliance permits have made dairy farming less viable.The average dairy farm in Florida is small with only about 700 cows.This further prevents a single supplier from being able to influence the market price.Many farmers view this business as a family operation and one they would like to pass on to their children.But continued low milk prices and profits make the likelihood of such an inheritance unlikely.
Greg C.Bruno."Milk Industry Turns Sour," The Gainesville Sun,January 22,2004,pp.1,4.
-Which one of the following characteristics is NOT true of the milk industry?


Definitions:

Formal Operational

The final stage of cognitive development in Piaget's theory, characterized by the ability to think abstractly, logically, and systematically.

Abstract Thinking

Abstract thinking is the ability to consider concepts, understand complex ideas, and apply problem-solving strategies beyond the concrete and immediate.

Cognitive Development

refers to the processes by which thinking evolves, including acquiring, processing, and storing knowledge and information.

Object Permanence

The understanding that objects continue to exist even when they cannot be seen, heard, or otherwise sensed, typically developed in infancy.

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