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Not So Sweet
The American Conservative ^ | June 5, 2006 Issue | Timothy P. Carney

Posted on 05/30/2006 6:28:47 PM PDT by A. Pole

The work of harvesting sugarcane is grueling - even worse than picking cotton. With a knife, a cutter slices the cane stalk as close to the ground as possible. Standing in wet, soft muck soil, he chops off the leaves and the top of the stalk, tossing the cane into a pile. He does this thousands of times a day - stooping, cutting, standing, cutting, stacking, stooping. To guard against the sharp leaves and the swinging knife, cutters wear aluminum shields on their wrists and legs, as well as many layers, even in the hot Florida sun.

Given those conditions, sugar growers should have a hard time attracting workers. Indeed, it did not take long for the new sugar industry to get a bad name among the African-American migrant workers in the South, who soon learned to steer clear of cane fields in favor of fruits and vegetables.

By the 1930s, Big Sugar had a labor problem, and so it turned where Big Business often turns: Big Government. The New Deal operated as corporate welfare in many ways, but nowhere did it serve the exploitative purposes of big business as thoroughly as in the sugarcane fields of south Florida. Most objectionable - and most relevant to today’s policy debates - was how FDR and Big Sugar teamed up to use open borders and guest-worker programs to subvert the free market.

The sugar industry in America has never really operated in a free market. Cane sugar in Florida wouldn’t exist if the state government hadn’t drained the Everglades. It would disappear if the Army Corps of Engineers didn’t permanently alter the landscape and manage it at taxpayer expense to expose the muck soil and keep the water level just right for the growers.

Washington also provides subsidies to all sugar farmers in the form of loans collateralized by sugar - about 18 cents per pound. The world price of sugar is usually around 10 cents per pound or less, but the federal government also drastically limits sugar imports, ensuring a domestic price of about twice that. Uncle Sam also subsidizes private sugar storage facilities.

It is only fitting then that the federal government would subsidize Big Sugar’s labor needs. The nature of the work in the cane fields was only half the downside of cutting cane. The companies required their cutters to live in prison-like barracks that reeked of sweat and urine and eat sub-par food, according to many accounts. The deceptive pay practices yielded a federal investigation into U.S. Sugar.

Unsurprisingly, workers in Florida and the Deep South soon wanted nothing to do with cane fields. By 1932, the horrors of cane cutting were so well known that when U.S. Sugar advertised for 100 cutters in Fort Lauderdale, only two men applied. A better public-relations campaign would be needed, and so FDR’s New Deal provided it.

The United States Employment Service went far and wide advertising the dire need for sugar-field workers - essentially doing the sugar growers’ PR on the taxpayer dime. This didn’t work either.

In the spring of 1943, while so many American men were off at war, Big Sugar declared there was a labor shortage. In Florida, however, a national wartime ban on "pleasure driving" had shut down race tracks, surely leaving some unemployed behind. Harry McAlpin reported in the Chicago Defender, "the figures of one government agency show that 45,000 [farm] workers are now available in [Florida] - but not at the exploitation wages big farmers want to pay."

The cane fields of South Florida were the 1940s version of "jobs Americans won’t do." The work itself is grueling, dangerous, and monotonous, and very little at the time could be done to change that. But danger, monotony, and difficulty are not sufficient to make a job unfillable. Alaska crab fishermen, U.S. Marines, international spies, Hollywood stuntmen all have jobs that satisfy at least two of those conditions. These employers, therefore, are forced to make the jobs attractive.

Alaska crab fishermen sometimes work 20 hours a day on the icy decks of big iron boats tossing around in the frigid Bering Sea. It is terrifying, lonely, exhausting, and potentially deadly work. To make it worth the deckhands’ while, ship operators typically split the profits evenly with all their employees. This means that in one month, a fisherman could pull in tens of thousands of dollars.

The labor market requires that employers trying to fill harsh jobs offer recruits good pay or other bonuses. But big government’s specialty is distorting market conditions, frequently in the favor of big business.

Enter Franklin Roosevelt’s guest-worker program. Through an intergovernmental agreement on March 16, 1943, Roosevelt launched what later became the British West Indies Program (BWI). This opened the gates to farm workers from Jamaica, the Bahamas, and other Caribbean isles.

But FDR’s plan was not just about opening the borders to these workers. Under FDR’s BWI program, the federal government became an active partner with the sugar growers. Historian David McCally writes, "Between 1943 and 1947, the United States government played a direct role in negotiating employment contracts for offshore laborers and paid the cost of round-trip transportation for all workers between their homes and the United States."

Once again, Big Sugar was getting by on Big-Government largesse, but Uncle Sam’s help in this situation was not merely in footing the boat fare for the cane cutters. Roosevelt’s BWI program - and the guest-worker program that it grew into - provided sugar growers with the ideal worker.

One promotional film by the Florida Sugar Cane League claims, "To watch a West Indian wield a cane knife is to see a centuries-old art," reports Alec Wilkinson, author of Big Sugar. The clear implication was that West Indian workers are ideal for cutting cane because of some innate skill. In truth, they are the model cane workers because a workforce constantly under threat of deportation is a docile workforce.

West Indian laborers entering Florida under these immigration programs were even more beholden to their employers than were the black field hands of the decades before. Their vulnerability at the hands of their bosses extended far beyond the typical disadvantages a foreigner suffers in a new land. The BWI cane cutter was allowed into the country explicitly to perform one job. This meant that if his boss didn’t like him, he could send the worker out of the country.

Wilkinson writes that a sugar boss in the field who thought one cutter was working too slowly could "check him out" - send him back to his barracks with no wages for the day. If one worker was checked out three times in one season, the sugar farmer would send him back to his home country. If this was before the midpoint of the cane-cutting season, the worker himself was obligated, by the terms of his contract, to pay his roundtrip fare.

This advantage to the farmers of hiring temporary foreign workers was no accident. It was deliberate. In 1940, one grower wrote to the U.S. Department of Agriculture that if Washington were to help them find labor, the Bahamas would be a far better source than either the U.S. or its territory Puerto Rico. "The vast difference between the Bahama Island labor and domestic, including Puerto Rican," wrote the farmer, "is that labor transported from the Bahama Islands can be deported and sent home, if it does not work, which cannot be done in the instance of labor from domestic United States or Puerto Rico."

This moment of brutal honesty by a sugar farmer in the months before World War II gives us insight into the mind of shrewd employers throughout the decades. If your worker’s visa limits him to working for you, you become, in effect, the government.

A typical employer in a free market has only the power to stop paying his worker or possibly sue him if he doesn’t perform promised services. But under guest-worker programs, the employer gains the power of deportation.

In recognition of the fact that the employer/guest-worker relationship exists outside of the free market, the federal government provides special protection for these guest workers, guaranteeing adequate housing, food, and other conditions. In the rest of the economy, the enforcement mechanism for the worker’s needs is called freedom of movement. In a free market, a dissatisfied worker can walk away from a job. In the 20th-century indentured servitude of the cane fields, no such freedom existed, dragging Big Government even deeper into the realm of business.

In 1982, workers walked off the sugar field when their bosses told them the wage they would pay for a row of sugar that day. The price wasn’t worth their sweat and blood, they surmised. The next day, law enforcement greeted the workers outside their barracks, and 300 cutters were soon deported. Future cane cutters didn’t try to haggle much over wages.

Cutting sugarcane in Florida was a job Americans wouldn’t do. But that is true only when you take into account the whole package of cane-cutting employment. What Americans wouldn’t do was subject themselves to slavery, where not only their wages but their right to hold any job in America was dependent on remaining in the good graces of the boss, on whom they also depended for food and shelter.

George W. Bush’s guest-worker program will surely not be identical to Franklin D. Roosevelt’s. But Bush talks of a plan "to match willing foreign workers with willing U.S. employers." These workers would be here temporarily, and they would be here to work in one specific job. They would be powerless vis-à-vis their employers. That would be near indentured servitude - a job Americans won’t do.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: agriculture; biggovernment; business; fdr; gwb; immigration; jobs; labor; newdeal; subsidies; sugar; wages; workers
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To: MHGinTN
I think you now hold the prize! Congrats?

What did win? A lockbox? My very own Internet on ramp? Orange suntan sauce?

"Throughout most of my life, I raised tobacco. I want you to know that with my own hands, all of my life, I put it in the plant beds and transferred it. I've hoed it. I've dug in it. I've sprayed it, I've chopped it, I've shredded it, spiked it, put it in the barn and stripped it and sold it. (Source: [New York] Newsday, 2/26/88

21 posted on 05/30/2006 7:38:30 PM PDT by DUMBGRUNT (islam is a mutant meme)
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To: MHGinTN
It was better work than tossin' hay all day behind a smelly tractor.

And that's what I did as a teenager...For the most part, 90 lb round bales...

22 posted on 05/30/2006 7:51:23 PM PDT by Iscool (You mess with me, you mess with the whole trailer park...)
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To: Iscool

I guess I ought to be a physical and emotional wreck because I've done about all this stuff. Chopped some cane to make sorgum, shocked fodder, baled and hauled hay, shucked corn, chopped pigweed out of soybeans with a machete. I did it all before I was 18 years old, either because dad said do it, or because it was the best money I could make at the time. I got no sympathy for any lazy SOB that won't do hard work.

I suggest a national service program into which all able bodied 18 year olds have to go if they don't join the military. The government could then hire thm out to do the "jobs Americans won't do" Three years of physical labor at a reasonable wage would do more to produce decent productive citizens than any college course in existance.


23 posted on 05/30/2006 8:06:09 PM PDT by tickmeister (tickmeister)
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To: A. Pole
. . . even worse than picking cotton

Picking isn't grueling. It's not even hard. It's boring.

24 posted on 05/30/2006 8:19:05 PM PDT by William Terrell (Individuals can exist without government but government can't exist without individuals.)
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To: tickmeister

I'm with you. A national service program would have done me a world of good. I would have learned discipline, toughness, and thrift at the end of a drill instructor's boot.


25 posted on 05/30/2006 9:08:25 PM PDT by B-Chan (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan Any questions?)
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To: DUMBGRUNT

Amazing! Al would do or say anything to get elected. Think what a disaster it would be for America were he to actually succeed. That thought drove many of us in Tennessee to work our butts off keeping him from winning Tennessee in the electoral votes. I found him most despicable because of his 'change' reagrding abortion on demand ... he once professed to be pro-life (to get elected in Tennessee no doubt) but changed to get a better position with the democrat party national constituencies who worship that rite. Perhaps that helps you to understand why I despise the man.


26 posted on 05/30/2006 9:27:15 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote life support for others.)
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To: Iscool

The round baler hadn't been invented back then ... we tossed rectangular bales wrapped with twine. That was a time to learn team work.


27 posted on 05/30/2006 9:30:50 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote life support for others.)
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To: Wonder Warthog
Whoever wrote this article is completely delusional. Sugar cane has LONG been virtually completely automated. The last task that was not was the initial planting of the canes, but an automatic cane planter was invented (as I recall) around 1985. The kind of stoop hand labor described here didn't exist even in the mid-1950's, at least not in the cane fields of South Louisiana where I grew up.

Yep. My FH reports, his dad being an agricultural manager that supervises harvesting sugar plantations all over the world, that Florida is fully automated, and Jamaica is not. Large plantations in Sudan use harvesters, some smaller ones do not, but in those cases you can generally either buy a machine or employ an entire village that might otherwise be starving. Most of third-world sugar farming tend to follow that route, though made worlds easier by the fact that they're allowed to burn before they harvest (can you imagine doing that in Florida? Think of the second hand smoke! The children! The humanity!)
28 posted on 05/30/2006 9:41:37 PM PDT by Shion (Jaded Southern Californian)
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To: A. Pole
One question....if we can agree that we already have more illegal workers than we need, then what need is there to sweeten the pot with perks such as amnesty and free social services?

Bush's very policy is a statement of belief that America does not have ENOUGH illegals.

29 posted on 05/30/2006 11:03:51 PM PDT by The Duke
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To: tickmeister
There are a lot of people who act as if Americans are afraid of hard work.The illegals are taking jobs that only a sucker would do for the amount it pays.There would be Americans doing these jobs if the wages were fair.The hypocrite politicians claim that they care about illegals but then they turn around and help others exploit them and screw them financially.
30 posted on 05/30/2006 11:29:10 PM PDT by peeps36
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To: peeps36
There are a lot of people who act as if Americans are afraid of hard work.The illegals are taking jobs that only a sucker would do for the amount it pays.There would be Americans doing these jobs if the wages were fair.The hypocrite politicians claim that they care about illegals but then they turn around and help others exploit them and screw them financially.

That is what truly frosts me- the unbridled arrogance, and contempt, from a bunch of chattering heads who have probably never worked up an honest sweat in their $3,000 Armani-suited lives.

I've done everything from owning & running small businesses, to digging ditches.

White collar, blue collar, and no collar-- can't say "I've done it all," but I've done a lot of it.

When I was coming up in the world, if you wanted a job done- whether it was building a building, building a road, or driving a railroad through a swamp or a mountain, you hired a bunch of Americans.

White, black, brown, yellow, or red. And we'd do it. Fussing, and cussing, quarreling- but working together, we'd get it done.

31 posted on 05/31/2006 2:48:00 AM PDT by backhoe (-30-)
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To: Moonman62

I think it would be more correct to say that ethanol will vary according to the region, because shipping is an issue. That is corn in the corn belt, celulose where that grows as in NY, and here in Florida it will be orange rinds. However, as sugar gives the best yield, we will certainly plant that wherever we can.


32 posted on 05/31/2006 3:06:12 AM PDT by ClaireSolt (.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
Know anything about Sugar Cane harvesting automation B4Ranch?
Comment ca va, sha?

Taint no hand cuttin' wit dim dar combine ma-cheens in Cajun country. Dem folks in Florida tho...dey be strange.
Harvesting of cane in Hawaii and Louisiana is highly mechanized. Machines top the canes at a uniform height, cut them off at ground level, and deposit them in rows. In Florida, cane is mainly cut by hand. Leaves .and trash are burned from the cane in the rows by use of flame thrower type machines. An alternate method is to burn the leaves from the standing cane, after which it is cut and taken directly to the mill. Delay between cutting and milling in either case should be as short as possible since delay results in loss of sugar content. Machines are under development that will cut, clean and load the cane so it can be taken directly to the mill.
Ahhh...New Iberia with the smell of smoke in the air and a constant haze. What memories.
33 posted on 05/31/2006 3:39:30 AM PDT by philman_36
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To: Moonman62
"Is the cane still burned before harvest?"

Yes. Hell on folks with allergies.

34 posted on 05/31/2006 3:51:58 AM PDT by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel-NRA)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

30 years ago I used to drive by the Florida sugar cane fields north of Miami, today I don't even know if they still exist.


35 posted on 05/31/2006 6:57:26 AM PDT by B4Ranch (Immigration Control and Border Security -The jobs George W. Bush doesn't want to do.)
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To: philman_36

First, that article is from 1971. Second, one has to wonder if the cane in Florida at that time was still cut by hand because of the availability of slave labor, or if there was some other reason.


36 posted on 05/31/2006 7:35:26 AM PDT by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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To: Moonman62
First, that article is from 1971.
And? The request was for general information about sugar cane harvesting automation which the article provides.
Second, one has to wonder if the cane in Florida at that time was still cut by hand because of the availability of slave labor, or if there was some other reason.
I don't know, nor do I care. And I'm not going to look for the info either. That was over forty years ago.
However, as to modernization in Florida and touching slightly on the issue of hand cutting...
From the Center for Immigration Studies...

More Guest Workers? Not What We Should Pick (The Washington Post February 25, 2001)
You can see how changing the labor market plays out in the fields. Through the 1980s, sugar companies in Florida imported West Indian guest workers to harvest cane by hand. Then the industry was hit by a wave of lawsuits filed on behalf of workers whose contracts had been violated. This proved so nettlesome that the growers calculated it would be more profitable to mechanize the sugar harvest than to honor farm worker contracts. Today, virtually all Florida sugar cane is harvested by machine, resulting in dramatic increases in productivity, higher wages and more civilized working conditions for the remaining workers. In short, cutting off the stream of foreign labor promoted dramatic steps toward modernization.

37 posted on 05/31/2006 8:11:55 AM PDT by philman_36
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To: Sam Cree; Joe Brower

Big Sugar in FL - always a controversy.


38 posted on 05/31/2006 8:15:56 AM PDT by stainlessbanner
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To: JulieRNR21; kinganamort; katherineisgreat; floriduh voter; summer; Goldwater Girl; windchime; ...


39 posted on 05/31/2006 8:20:47 AM PDT by Joe Brower (The Constitution defines Conservatism. *NRA*)
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To: philman_36
Thanks for the information. I mentioned the date because that was an issue in earlier posts in the thread. I wasn't trying to be combative. My apologies.

I also remember a couple of years ago, the orange growers threatened to mechanize, because the illegal labor was making demands. All this supports my belief that exploitable, and illegal labor postpones technological advances.

40 posted on 05/31/2006 8:40:12 AM PDT by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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