I know of quite a few professional advisors who recommended taking less than 100% so professional advice from an accountant or business professional is not always the sure fire answer. I recall quite a few newspaper columnists in Grainews and other papers who recommended not participating in FIDP/CAIS at all. The program has changed quite a bit from when FIDP and later CAIS were first trotted out.
NISA was a good program in so far as you paid in a dollar and the government paid in a dollar. If you do not qualify for CAIS you get no benefit at all on good years and your reference margin is sure to decline, it is only a matter of when not if everyone runs out of reference margin.
For many, as feed inventories return to just normal levels after the drought years the positive change in non cash feed inventories will cause them to not qualify for a CAIS payment even though they suffered a cash flow disaster from BSE. Even keeping cows, a common BSE strategy, will reduce your CAIS benefits. CAIS has never paid cow calf producers for the loss in equity caused by BSE even though the CAIS advance program was partly based on equity loss. Those advances all too often had to be paid back, a debt trap if there ever was one. The CAIS program will never compensate those cow calf producers who hung onto their cows for the equity they lost as a result of BSE.
The best accountant cannot change the built in problems with the CAIS program.
NISA was a good program in so far as you paid in a dollar and the government paid in a dollar. If you do not qualify for CAIS you get no benefit at all on good years and your reference margin is sure to decline, it is only a matter of when not if everyone runs out of reference margin.
For many, as feed inventories return to just normal levels after the drought years the positive change in non cash feed inventories will cause them to not qualify for a CAIS payment even though they suffered a cash flow disaster from BSE. Even keeping cows, a common BSE strategy, will reduce your CAIS benefits. CAIS has never paid cow calf producers for the loss in equity caused by BSE even though the CAIS advance program was partly based on equity loss. Those advances all too often had to be paid back, a debt trap if there ever was one. The CAIS program will never compensate those cow calf producers who hung onto their cows for the equity they lost as a result of BSE.
The best accountant cannot change the built in problems with the CAIS program.
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