rsomer and rusty1,
What is a producer owned packing plant going to do to help save the industry? It is not going to increase meat sales at all, and that is where the problem lies. If we have more animals offered for sale than we have buyers, we have a problem. The old supply and demand economics comes into play. It says that price will decline until supply drops. Yes the US packers are fleecing us, but it is only because we are offering more animals for sale than they can sell, so they don't have to pay more. A producer owned plant will not help this. There is only so much market available for our beef right now, and the packers are filling this market. Even if the price of beef at the supermarket dropped, it would not increase meat consumption long term, as competing products like chicken and pork would eventually have to drop in price also, in order to keep their market share.
The only answer is to either increase demand or reduce supply. Since we can't increase demand without the border opening, then we should reduce supply. There are two options here, we let the chips fall where they may and we lose 1/2 of all the cows in Canada, or #2 the gov't buys the cows at a good price and either ships them as canned beef to a 3rd world country, or buries them locally.
Letting the chips fall where they may, will cause lots of farm auctions, divorces, and people jumping off of bridges. Option 2, will I think be very well supported by the public if it is explained as the only answer to an oversupply problem. In no way will food safety be a reason for depopulation, rather a drastic measure to take to correct a supply that is twice a big as the demand.
And yes, if the border opens in a month, we will have high prices on 1/2 of our herd size. In general on a cull, the older more unproductive animals will go first, so we will be sitting with a younger more productive herd if the border should reopen.
So in my eyes, a producer owned plant will put more money in farmers pockets for the 1/2 of the beef that we can sell, but it won't do anything for the other 1/2 that is oversupply and growing larger every day!
What is a producer owned packing plant going to do to help save the industry? It is not going to increase meat sales at all, and that is where the problem lies. If we have more animals offered for sale than we have buyers, we have a problem. The old supply and demand economics comes into play. It says that price will decline until supply drops. Yes the US packers are fleecing us, but it is only because we are offering more animals for sale than they can sell, so they don't have to pay more. A producer owned plant will not help this. There is only so much market available for our beef right now, and the packers are filling this market. Even if the price of beef at the supermarket dropped, it would not increase meat consumption long term, as competing products like chicken and pork would eventually have to drop in price also, in order to keep their market share.
The only answer is to either increase demand or reduce supply. Since we can't increase demand without the border opening, then we should reduce supply. There are two options here, we let the chips fall where they may and we lose 1/2 of all the cows in Canada, or #2 the gov't buys the cows at a good price and either ships them as canned beef to a 3rd world country, or buries them locally.
Letting the chips fall where they may, will cause lots of farm auctions, divorces, and people jumping off of bridges. Option 2, will I think be very well supported by the public if it is explained as the only answer to an oversupply problem. In no way will food safety be a reason for depopulation, rather a drastic measure to take to correct a supply that is twice a big as the demand.
And yes, if the border opens in a month, we will have high prices on 1/2 of our herd size. In general on a cull, the older more unproductive animals will go first, so we will be sitting with a younger more productive herd if the border should reopen.
So in my eyes, a producer owned plant will put more money in farmers pockets for the 1/2 of the beef that we can sell, but it won't do anything for the other 1/2 that is oversupply and growing larger every day!
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