Canadian producers
Beware for the sake of your industry.
The previous poster is promoting stinking thinking that must be addressed. The writer’s twisted logic is dangerous and misleading. His comments are well written and presented in such as way that readers might think that he knows what he is talking about. In his posts there is a thread of truth. However the end logic will mislead the reader.
Example "There can be no doubt that the global packing industry uses lower live cattle prices in other countries to drive down domestic prices"
This statement is probably true and this is normal. You as cattle producers do the same thing on a smaller scale when you go to pruchase inputs such as hay and barley or corn. If you can buy out of province or state and get the corn cheaper you will use that information to lower the price locally. This is free enterprise.
I can assure you that the packers are not your enemies. If a cattle producing state does not have a large and aggressive packing plant, the prices will be lower in that state. When a modern packing plant is built in an area, it follows that the prices go up for cattle, not down.
The problem in Canada is huge oversupply. I would guess that you are consuming domestically less than half of the beef your country produces. If Americans did that the cattle market would collapse.
THIS (your) overproduction drives down prices and gives free opportunity to packing plants to pay less.
The Canadian mindset does not want to even think that they are overproducing. A more realistic scenario might be having a cattle herd that can meet domestic needs and can export 10% extra. But what would you do with all of the extra land etc that you have no domestic markets for. Therein lies your problem. Too much land and not enough market.
The large American owned packing plants are not your enemies. They will take advantage of the present economic situation just like you will. I would encourage you to build co operative plants if you fee that they can compete.
More packing plants will not help your situation. The real problem is oversupply. Either find something else to produce at a profit or go work in your oil industry. There are other ways to make a living.
NAFTA does give inroads into the American market for cattle and lumber, (as well as oil) but if you are in a position where you are pushing over supply into a foreign market, you will continue to be vulnerable.
Try to find something we need, not just something you NEED to produce.
Packers are not your enemy. Oversupply is a reality in the free market place.
The free market place will handle a certain amount of oversupply but not as much as your country is producing.
It is oversupply that is pushing down your prices. Which one of your wants to reduce his herd size first?
Beware for the sake of your industry.
The previous poster is promoting stinking thinking that must be addressed. The writer’s twisted logic is dangerous and misleading. His comments are well written and presented in such as way that readers might think that he knows what he is talking about. In his posts there is a thread of truth. However the end logic will mislead the reader.
Example "There can be no doubt that the global packing industry uses lower live cattle prices in other countries to drive down domestic prices"
This statement is probably true and this is normal. You as cattle producers do the same thing on a smaller scale when you go to pruchase inputs such as hay and barley or corn. If you can buy out of province or state and get the corn cheaper you will use that information to lower the price locally. This is free enterprise.
I can assure you that the packers are not your enemies. If a cattle producing state does not have a large and aggressive packing plant, the prices will be lower in that state. When a modern packing plant is built in an area, it follows that the prices go up for cattle, not down.
The problem in Canada is huge oversupply. I would guess that you are consuming domestically less than half of the beef your country produces. If Americans did that the cattle market would collapse.
THIS (your) overproduction drives down prices and gives free opportunity to packing plants to pay less.
The Canadian mindset does not want to even think that they are overproducing. A more realistic scenario might be having a cattle herd that can meet domestic needs and can export 10% extra. But what would you do with all of the extra land etc that you have no domestic markets for. Therein lies your problem. Too much land and not enough market.
The large American owned packing plants are not your enemies. They will take advantage of the present economic situation just like you will. I would encourage you to build co operative plants if you fee that they can compete.
More packing plants will not help your situation. The real problem is oversupply. Either find something else to produce at a profit or go work in your oil industry. There are other ways to make a living.
NAFTA does give inroads into the American market for cattle and lumber, (as well as oil) but if you are in a position where you are pushing over supply into a foreign market, you will continue to be vulnerable.
Try to find something we need, not just something you NEED to produce.
Packers are not your enemy. Oversupply is a reality in the free market place.
The free market place will handle a certain amount of oversupply but not as much as your country is producing.
It is oversupply that is pushing down your prices. Which one of your wants to reduce his herd size first?
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