Corolinth wrote:
Rorinthas wrote:
Yes but we aren't anywhere near that potential yet. We can feed the world without breaking a sweat if we had the ways and means of getting it to the right places.
We've had to advance our technology several times in order to keep up with the growing population in our own hemisphere. So no, we can not feed the world without breaking a sweat as we've already had to break a sweat as it were. If our current rate of agricultural advancement keeps up we'll be alright. Unfortunately, we're the only country in the world keeping that pace. Moreover, the rest of the world is still behind our WWII food production in terms of quantity of food per acre. That includes the "first world" countries that are supposedly technologically on par with us.
It's not as if our technological advances in agriculture has been some crash program to stave off imminent starvation. Advances have largely been at the same rate as everything else has advanced. A hundred years ago we were just beginning to experiment with flight; less than 70 years after the Wright Brothers we put a man on the moon. 70 years ago mechanical and analog computers like the Norden bombsight and the Mark 37 were state-of-the-art; 40 years ago my dad was an engineering student telling my mom about the incredible possibilities of solid-state electronics, and today we can fit enough computing power in a desktop to rival acres of the computers used to send men to the moon.
I'd also like to know where you get the idea that first-world nations are generally pre-WWII in terms of agricultural technology.