Randy I think collective selling and choice are entertwined in this debate. You seem to have fallen for the myth that grain farmers have no choice where to sell which is not true. If Per wants to develop a niche market for a particular type of wheat or barley product and finds buyers for it in the US like he does for his rye there is no regulation stopping him from doing that. The CWB has systems that facilitate such transactions.
Another myth "Our industry is not monopolised to the point that it seems that the two top quality grain products are." There is far more concentration on the beef side compared to the many, many buyers of CWB grains. Central to this myth is the mistaken idea that the CWB is the only "buyer" of wheat and barley - it isn't its a marketing board working on behalf of producers. I would suggest you make improvements to it if this board isn't working to best advantage but to destroy it under the false idea that it is this evil single entity that is the only buyer of your grain rather than a marketing agency working on your behalf is surely throwing the baby out with the bathwater?
Back to the choice thing - in the fall of 2003 a feedlot owner was telling me he was taking 18c/lb for his fed cattle with a closed US border and being on the wrong side of one of the two major buyers - where were his choices? I would suggest he had a lot less choices than the grain guys do with the CWB so don't tell me they are the only ones who don't have a choice.
Per, I'm not out of the commodity beef business, i'm more in it than I am in the direct marketing business.
As a grain grower you are not "forced" to use a collective marketing system - you can grow crops not covered by CWB regulations, you can grow crops and sell them for feed or you can grow CWB governed crops and sell them where ever you like subject to the CWB regulations. Now financially that may not pencil out for you - sometimes I'd like to sell fat cattle at US prices but that doesnt mean I'm going to get them - I'm just making the point that products and prices are regulated economically as well as by rules and for that reason "choice" applies not only in a regulated environment but in a "free market" environment.
Another myth "Our industry is not monopolised to the point that it seems that the two top quality grain products are." There is far more concentration on the beef side compared to the many, many buyers of CWB grains. Central to this myth is the mistaken idea that the CWB is the only "buyer" of wheat and barley - it isn't its a marketing board working on behalf of producers. I would suggest you make improvements to it if this board isn't working to best advantage but to destroy it under the false idea that it is this evil single entity that is the only buyer of your grain rather than a marketing agency working on your behalf is surely throwing the baby out with the bathwater?
Back to the choice thing - in the fall of 2003 a feedlot owner was telling me he was taking 18c/lb for his fed cattle with a closed US border and being on the wrong side of one of the two major buyers - where were his choices? I would suggest he had a lot less choices than the grain guys do with the CWB so don't tell me they are the only ones who don't have a choice.
Per, I'm not out of the commodity beef business, i'm more in it than I am in the direct marketing business.
As a grain grower you are not "forced" to use a collective marketing system - you can grow crops not covered by CWB regulations, you can grow crops and sell them for feed or you can grow CWB governed crops and sell them where ever you like subject to the CWB regulations. Now financially that may not pencil out for you - sometimes I'd like to sell fat cattle at US prices but that doesnt mean I'm going to get them - I'm just making the point that products and prices are regulated economically as well as by rules and for that reason "choice" applies not only in a regulated environment but in a "free market" environment.
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