10. Read this excerpt from the October 18, 2022, Wall Street Journal. KINDERHOOK, N.Y.—Golden Harvest Farms has grown from a small apple-growing operation when Doug Grout’s grandfather opened it after World War II, to a multipronged business that includes a retail stand, cider press, distillery, tasting room and barbecue restaurant. But Mr. Grout said he sees a cloudier future for the business due to new state regulations that will require him to increasingly pay more overtime to the farmworkers who pick his apples in the coming years, raising one of his primary costs. “We were looking to buy another orchard
10. Read this excerpt from the October 18, 2022, Wall Street Journal.
KINDERHOOK, N.Y.—Golden Harvest Farms has grown from a small apple-growing operation when Doug Grout’s grandfather opened it after World War II, to a multipronged business that includes a retail stand, cider press, distillery, tasting room and barbecue restaurant.
But Mr. Grout said he sees a cloudier future for the business due to new state regulations that will require him to increasingly pay more overtime to the farmworkers who pick his apples in the coming years, raising one of his primary costs.
“We were looking to buy another orchard, and that whole thing is tabled,” said Mr. Grout, 52 years old, who co-owns Golden Harvest with his father, as he drove between rows of Honeycrisp trees. “We’re stepping away. You’re going to see farms go out of business. This is very shortsighted.”
For the apple market in New York, the new regulations will:
- Cause supply to shift to the left, leading to higher
prices and a decrease in quantity demanded. - Cause supply to decrease and
demand to decrease as prices rise. - Create apple shortages, higher prices, and a decrease in demand over time.
- Cause quantity supplied to fall and eventually quantity demanded as prices rise.
- Create more jobs for apple pickers now that a fair wage will be paid.

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