I was reading this article in Cattlement (August 2005) by Charlie Gracey and was rather intrigued by some of his observations.
His conclusions did not differ from what most primary producers already know but maybe the scope is broader.
He used a rather novel statistic to base his conclusions on: Fed and Non-Fed cattle Marketings per 100 cows. CanFax data.
He concludes in his summary:
" .We have adequate capacity but inadequate competition for our annual fed-beef production and there is no significant backlog of fed cattle. Of course the reopened border will bring back some of this necessary competition. Evidence of that is shown in the price jump when the market first opened.
. We have neither adequate capacity nor any semblance of competition for the supply of non-fed cattle and very limited markets for the non-fed product.
I believed from the beginning that the major problem was in the non-fed sector. This anaysis confirms it. Unfortunately, some people are sugesting we must get used to low cow prices if we are going to displace supplementary imports. This is nonsense. Cow prices in the U.S. are triple what they are in Canada and the U.S. does not permit supplementary imports."
Some of his numbers I find a little difficult to follow such as what happens to the fed beef that is not marketed i.e. the other approx 40% not shown on the tables.
Also, he notes "By the end of 2005 we will have disposed of a total 25 cows per 100 in the herd over a 3-year period. Normally we would have marketed about 42.4.
I would be interested in hearing your comments.
His conclusions did not differ from what most primary producers already know but maybe the scope is broader.
He used a rather novel statistic to base his conclusions on: Fed and Non-Fed cattle Marketings per 100 cows. CanFax data.
He concludes in his summary:
" .We have adequate capacity but inadequate competition for our annual fed-beef production and there is no significant backlog of fed cattle. Of course the reopened border will bring back some of this necessary competition. Evidence of that is shown in the price jump when the market first opened.
. We have neither adequate capacity nor any semblance of competition for the supply of non-fed cattle and very limited markets for the non-fed product.
I believed from the beginning that the major problem was in the non-fed sector. This anaysis confirms it. Unfortunately, some people are sugesting we must get used to low cow prices if we are going to displace supplementary imports. This is nonsense. Cow prices in the U.S. are triple what they are in Canada and the U.S. does not permit supplementary imports."
Some of his numbers I find a little difficult to follow such as what happens to the fed beef that is not marketed i.e. the other approx 40% not shown on the tables.
Also, he notes "By the end of 2005 we will have disposed of a total 25 cows per 100 in the herd over a 3-year period. Normally we would have marketed about 42.4.
I would be interested in hearing your comments.
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