• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    2719 days ago

    Agricultural land specifically. Growing stuff in the city is just not a great idea from a land use perspective.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      819 days ago

      Agricultural land isn’t cheap either which is why most farms are owned by massive corporations these days. They’ve bought up most of the good growing land.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          1318 days ago

          Those numbers can be quite skewed considering their definition of a “farm” is one that generates as little as $1000 in revenue per year, so anyone with a few chickens in their suburban backyard that sells eggs to their coworkers would fall under this definition. They even outline that 80% of these small family farmers have full-time jobs outside of farming. They also claim giant companies are “family owned” simply because a few family members control a majority stake. One could call Walmart or News Corp “family owned businesses” using this same definition and claim Walmart is a tiny portion of the retail space because there are 500k individuals selling keychains on Etsy versus their single company.

        • @Nalivai
          link
          English
          418 days ago

          By your link, 90% of farms produce 21% of producs. So yeah, most farms are owned by corpos, if we apply the meaning correctly

          • @ikidd
            link
            English
            018 days ago

            You aren’t reading that correctly.

            • @Nalivai
              link
              English
              217 days ago

              “Small family maps” correspond to almost 90% in the “number of farms” graph and 21% in “value of production” graph, how else can anyone read it?

              • @ikidd
                link
                English
                117 days ago

                Take family farms in total. A 3000ac farm run by 2 brothers is still a family farm that the kids are inheriting. Nobody here has a clue how farms in us and Canada work.