It should be an articlevideo from which you learned the


Throughout the course, you have been provided with videos and articles in This Week in Business News. Pick one of these articles/videos which deals with an economic challenge that interests you.

It should be an article/video from which you learned the most, from which you got an insight that changed your mind, or with which you disagree.

Prepare a paper on this article/video in which you explain why you chose it. What made this issue important to you?

Then identify which of the Ten Principles this article relies on. Does this article/video reject any or all of the Ten Principles?

In your analysis of the article/video and the Ten Principles, be sure to rely on at least two high-quality professional or academic articles on the same issue.

This paper must include:

Your introduction, summary and understanding of the initial article/video

A short discussion of your research and conclusions you were able to draw from it.

An explanation of what you learned and how you will use this new understanding.

Write a two to three (2-3) page paper in which you:

Write an introduction for your paper explaining what the topic is, why the topic in the article/video is important to you, and why you think others should try to understand it.

Write at least one paragraph summarizing the key points made in the article/video.

Identify and explain how Mankiw's 10 Principles are foundational to the issues discussed in the article/video.

Find two other high-quality professional or academic quality articles on the same topic. Identify what these articles contribute to understanding the topic or issue and whether they agree, do not agree, or somewhat agree/disagree with the initial article.

Write a conclusion that explains what you learned about the topic and what conclusion you draw from your research on the topic.

Use at least two (2) quality resources in this assignment.

Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:

Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA formatting. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.

Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student's name, the professor's name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.

Article:

America's Dairy Farmers Dump 43 Million Gallons of Excess Milk

Spilled milk hits highest in decades, as prices drop and supplies bulge; putting more butter in McMuffins and cheese in tacos

U.S. dairy farmers are dumping tens of millions of gallons of milk in the midst of a supply glut which has also resulted in warehouses full of cheese.

By Kelsey Gee

Updated Oct. 12, 2016 6:29 p.m. ET

The Wall Street Journal

Farmers in the U.S. are pouring out tens of millions of gallons of excess milk, amid a massive glut that has slashed prices and has filled warehouses with cheese.

More than 43 million gallons' worth of milk were dumped in fields, manure lagoons or animal feed, or have been lost on truck routes or discarded at plants in the first eight months of 2016, according to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

That is enough milk to fill 66 Olympic swimming pools, and the most wasted in at least 16 years of data requested by The Wall Street Journal.

Desperate producers are working to find new uses for the excess, like getting more milk into school lunches, and in revamped tacos and Egg McMuffins. But many can't even afford to transport raw milk to market at current prices, which have plunged 36% on average since prices hit records in 2014.

"Everyone has dumped milk, from Minnesota to New England," said Ken Nobis, head of the Michigan Milk Producers Association.

Dairy and meat producers in the U.S. and abroad expanded their operations two years ago in response to a shortage, setting the stage for the current global glut.

American farmers are in the process of harvesting record-large corn and soybean crops, and meatpackers are now producing the most ever meat and poultry. As a result, food prices in the U.S. have plummeted and farm incomes this year are headed for their third consecutive drop.

On Tuesday, the USDA pledged to buy about $20 million of cheddar cheese to help struggling dairy farmers, the second time it has intervened in the market in less than three months.

The Michigan Milk Producers Association, a farmer-run cooperative, has added shifts at its dairy plants in Ovid and Constantine and bought equipment to handle an additional million pounds of raw milk each day. As the market has softened, the group has donated 83,000 gallons of milk to a food bank.

Even so, over the summer, the co-op had to dump a batch of excess skim milk into lagoons of manure because it couldn't find a trucker to haul it to a plant with spare capacity in Wisconsin. "Any milk disposal is a very difficult decision," said Mr. Nobis. "No one gets any value whatsoever out of it."

Meanwhile, Dairy Management Inc., a de facto marketing firm that is paid for by America's 43,000 dairy farmers, has invested tens of millions of dollars in the past year to develop new milk-heavy menu items with McDonald's Corp., Yum Brands Inc.'s Taco Bell, Domino's Pizza Inc.and about 10 other companies it calls "dairy partners."

Food scientists and dietitians funded by DMI worked with McDonald's, for instance, to replace liquid margarine with butter in its breakfast egg sandwiches, muffins, buns and other menu items.

The new recipe was introduced at 15,000 restaurants in September 2015. McDonald's spokeswoman Becca Hary said switching to butter was part of the chain's "customer-led" shift to source simpler ingredients, and contributed to "a double-digit percentage increase in Egg McMuffin sales."

With Taco Bell, the dairy group created the "Quesalupa," a cheese-laden cross between a flat quesadilla and a firm-shelled chalupa that made its debut in February.

DMI ramped up spending on strategic partnerships last year to over $30 million, more than double the investment six years ago, when the group first began researching and developing new products with companies.

Thanks in part to cheesier pizzas and more buttery buns, commercial use of those two dairy products was up 4% in the year through July. On average, each American last year ate an extra pound of cheese and butter combined, according to the latest USDA data. That has helped the industry combat a decadeslong decline in Americans' consumption of fluid milk.

McDonald's switch to butter alone is projected to use up to 600 million pounds of milk annually.

"If you create the innovative products that people want, in the ways they want them, you can be successful," said DMI Chief Executive Tom Gallagher.

Even organic dairy farmers, whose costs can be as much as double those for conventional producers thanks to their smaller scale and pricey feed, have resorted to selling milk to faraway or conventional plants to get rid of it, sacrificing their price advantage.

"There are California producers so desperate to move organic milk they're coming after our market in Atlanta," said Eric Newman, vice president of sales at Organic Valley in La Farge, Wis. The dairy cooperative this year shipped organic milk powder to a customer in Europe at a steep discount. "It's a mess," Mr. Newman said.

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