Submitted by latinometrics t3_11hezyg in dataisbeautiful
LanewayRat t1_jatlbsz wrote
What about the rest of the world? Why indicate “8 European countries off the chart” as if they are the only ones? For example, Australian production is about 48 thousand tonnes p.a.
Fearless_Baseball121 t1_jauxlmo wrote
Denmark is 455 thousand tonnes p.a. which is 78kg pr. Capita and your neighbors over at New Zealand does 76.1kg pr capita.
US does a total of 6.200 thousand tonnes p.a. and are not even mentioned on the graph.
andyrocks t1_javgbwl wrote
>US does a total of 6.200 thousand tonnes p.a.
The difference being nobody in the civilised world considers it cheese
coolguymark t1_javljiv wrote
There’s some incredible cheeses in the us. Go to Wisconsin and you’ll agree.
andyrocks t1_jaw00ic wrote
No, because then I'll be in Wisconsin.
ca_kingmaker t1_jaw8bpq wrote
No, actually it’s that their milk is so subsidized that dumping it is profitable.
SentientKeyboard t1_jawgg1a wrote
Same tired trope about the US. It's like beer. The US has some of the best cheese and beers and wines in the world, but uncultured Europeans want to compare Kraft singles to their named cheeses when smaller farms in places like Vermont or Wisconsin are making incredible products.
hidden_secret t1_jawuafd wrote
I mean, I'm just looking at the cheese you eat (stuff like cheddar!).
You might have incredible cheese, but if it's only eaten by 1% of the population, it can't be compared to cheese from other countries that most people eat in these countries.
SentientKeyboard t1_jaxc4wo wrote
In that case, the majority of it that's being consumed is just as run of the mill as the cheeses in the US. And we're talking actual cheese, not a comparison in bad faith between American "cheese products" and actual European cheese, but the cheese that gets counted in production statistics as cheese. Just because people make up a specific word to call it and slap a PDO sticker on it doesn't make it more special.
[deleted] t1_jaxolyf wrote
[removed]
andyrocks t1_jawy2wc wrote
Which makes up a small fraction of those millions of tons of "cheese".
waszumfickleseich t1_jax3141 wrote
MUH MICROCHEESERIES
vrenak t1_jawaxlb wrote
Because there's a little more to making cheese than making your milk hard...
KiwasiGames t1_javft0p wrote
Latinometrics is almost always about making Latin America look good. It’s a propaganda machine, not a data tool.
vrenak t1_jawatyd wrote
48k tonnes? You don't like cheese?
LanewayRat t1_jay5zxh wrote
You got production mixed up with consumption. Australia actually is the 4th largest consumer of cheese per capita in the world. We are behind EU (27 countries counted as 1), US and Canada. https://www.statista.com/statistics/527195/consumption-of-cheese-per-capita-worldwide-country/
Domestic production of cheese is limited by the amount of dairy farming land available.
izeris_ t1_jav8xou wrote
Have you thought of Latinometrics wanting to compare with just european countries?
Also USA makes just 16kg per capita
LanewayRat t1_jay6pjs wrote
Doesn’t say that though.
My point is that the graph is concocted to make Latin American production appear more significant than it is. It’s not a careful analysis, it’s just spin.
el_grort t1_jaw810f wrote
Also, given Switzerland was the main example for comparison, it probably makes sense to connect it with other countries in its neighbourhood. Basically saying Switzerland isn't a massive producer like the other eight big European producers, which is relevant.
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