farmer
(noun)
Someone who creates sales demand by activities that directly influence and alter the buying process.
Examples of farmer in the following topics:
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The Farmer's Alliance
- The Farmers' Alliance was an organized agrarian economic movement among U.S. farmers that flourished in the 1880s.
- The Farmers' Alliance was an organized agrarian economic movement among American farmers that developed and flourished in 1875.
- The movement included several parallel but independent political organizations: the National Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union, comprised of white farmers of the South; the National Farmers' Alliance, comprised of white and black farmers of the Midwest and High Plains (where the Granger movement had been strong); and the Colored Farmers' National Alliance and Cooperative Union, comprised of African-American farmers of the South.
- As the focus of the farmers' movement shifted into politics, the Farmers' Alliance faded away.
- The Populist Party grew directly out of the Farmers' Alliance.
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Agricultural Interest Groups
- Agricultural interest groups are a type of economic interest group that represent farmers.
- Agricultural interest groups represent the economic interests of farmers.
- There are various types of farms and farmers in the U.S. that often have conflicting interests.
- One example are advocacy around the Farmers' Market Nutrition Program/Senior Farmers' Market Nutrition Program .
- Small farmers are just one part of the larger group of farmers involved in agricultural interest groups.
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The Agrarian and Populist Movements
- Founded in 1867, the Farmers Movement sought to advance the economic and political status of poor, rural people, especially farmers.
- The National Farmers Alliance and Industrial Union, formed in 1889, embraced several originally independent, and sometimes secret, organizations, including the National Farmers Alliance, The Colored Farmers' National Alliance, and the Cooperative Union.
- For the Southern farmer, a clear enemy was the crop-lien system, in which farmers mortgaged their future crops in return for furnished supplies.
- This practice placed many cotton farmers in debt to country merchants.
- In short, the movement lessened rural isolation and created many opportunities for farmers.
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Proactive Representatives
- Farmers are careful to produce a harvest.
- The bad Farmers do not close the sale well.
- The bad farmers think customer service is a substitute for a closing.
- The farmer has a lot fewer customers, but all good farmers are high producing.
- Proactive representatives who are farmers work hard to produce a harvest.
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In the 1980s and 1990s
- In 1990, it approved legislation that encouraged farmers to plant crops for which they traditionally had not received deficiency payments, and it reduced the amount of land for which farmers could qualify for deficiency payments.
- A new Republican Congress, elected in 1994, sought to wean farmers from their reliance on government assistance.
- Under the law, farmers would get fixed subsidy payments unrelated to market prices.
- Even with these political concessions to farmers, questions remained whether the less controlled system would endure.
- Farmers continued to try to boost their incomes by producing more, despite lower prices.
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Farm and Rural Programs
- The Court also held that the so-called tax was not a true tax, because the payments to farmers were coupled with unlawful and oppressive coercive contracts and the proceeds were earmarked for the benefit of farmers complying with the prescribed conditions.
- The AAA disproportionately benefited large farmers and food processors, to the disadvantage of small farmers and sharecroppers.
- For example, the AAA stipulated that farmers were required to pay a share of the government funds they recieved (as part of the acre reduction contracts) to the tenant farmers and sharecroppers who held a portion of the farmland.
- What's more, this requirement gave landlords an incentive to get rid of their tenant farmers and replace them with wage laborers.
- The New Deal's agricultural programs were controversial and criticized harshly by many, including some farmers.
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Farm Policy of the 20th Century
- Farmers again called for help from the federal government.
- The period was even more disastrous for farmers than earlier tough times because farmers were no longer self-sufficient.
- For farmers, the economic crisis compounded difficulties arising from overproduction.
- Other New Deal initiatives aided farmers.
- By restricting sales, such orders were intended to increase the prices that farmers received.
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Commercial Farmers
- Small landowning family farmers, the yeomen ideal of Jeffersonian democracy, were prevalent at the turn of the nineteenth century in both the North and South.
- Landowning yeomen were typically subsistence farmers, but some also grew crops for market.
- John Deere's horse-drawn steel plow also led to more efficient farming practices, replacing the difficult oxen-driven wooden plows that farmers had employed for centuries.
- At the same time, U.S. industrialization and urbanization in the North opened up lucrative domestic markets for American farmers.
- Farmers in the West were producing more wheat than the West could consume, and crop surpluses were sold to the manufacturing Northeast.
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Introduction to American Agriculture: Its Changing Significance
- Farmers play an important role in any society, of course, since they feed people.
- Early in the nation's life, farmers were seen as exemplifying economic virtues such as hard work, initiative, and self-sufficiency.
- The American farmer has generally been quite successful at producing food.
- American farmers owe their ability to produce large yields to a number of factors.
- Farmers have not repealed some of the fundamental laws of nature, however.
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Early Farm Policy
- Widespread individual ownership of modest-sized farmers was never the norm in the South as it was in the rest of the United States.
- As the U.S. farm economy grew, farmers increasingly became aware that government policies affected their livelihoods.
- The first political advocacy group for farmers, the Grange, was formed in 1867.
- It spread rapidly, and similar groups -- such as the Farmers' Alliance and the Populist Party -- followed.
- Political agitation by farmers produced some results.