Everyone is saying CAIS doesn't work, and they're right. But no one seems to have any ideas on how to fix it.
I've been giving it some thought. The way I see it, a program like this is OK in a fairly stable functioning market where there are ups and downs, not just years and years of nothing but downs. Even in the meltdown in 1996, the downside didn't last much more than one year. CAIS would have been a godsend then, and after the market got going again we'd get by just fine without it until the next down side of the cycle.
Since 2003, we have not been in a fairly stable functioning market. We have not been in a functioning market at all. Five years of solidly deteriorating conditions is more than any Olympic average can be expected to cover.
My suggestion is that in the case of a long term disruption like we've lived through, that the number of years used to come to a reference margin should be extended to reach beyond the abnormal years. The total collapse of the Canadian beef industry over one cow qualifies as abnormal.
I believe that if we had not taken the extraordinary beating of the years since BSE, we would be in a position to view the latest MCOOL trade issues as an irritant rather than as the final push that can destroy the Canadian cattle business.
So what I'm thinking is that in special cases like we are living with, CAIS margin calculations should use more than four years. Something like choosing the best four out of ten, and dropping the high and low from those four. That would include years from "normal" market years, and would stop the slow march to oblivion that CAIS is taking us down.
It would be a very simple fix involving only one calculation, and would make a complete overhaul unnecessary. We've even got nine years in the system already, so that makes it even simpler.
What does everyone else think? Is it too simple for a government to grasp?
I've been giving it some thought. The way I see it, a program like this is OK in a fairly stable functioning market where there are ups and downs, not just years and years of nothing but downs. Even in the meltdown in 1996, the downside didn't last much more than one year. CAIS would have been a godsend then, and after the market got going again we'd get by just fine without it until the next down side of the cycle.
Since 2003, we have not been in a fairly stable functioning market. We have not been in a functioning market at all. Five years of solidly deteriorating conditions is more than any Olympic average can be expected to cover.
My suggestion is that in the case of a long term disruption like we've lived through, that the number of years used to come to a reference margin should be extended to reach beyond the abnormal years. The total collapse of the Canadian beef industry over one cow qualifies as abnormal.
I believe that if we had not taken the extraordinary beating of the years since BSE, we would be in a position to view the latest MCOOL trade issues as an irritant rather than as the final push that can destroy the Canadian cattle business.
So what I'm thinking is that in special cases like we are living with, CAIS margin calculations should use more than four years. Something like choosing the best four out of ten, and dropping the high and low from those four. That would include years from "normal" market years, and would stop the slow march to oblivion that CAIS is taking us down.
It would be a very simple fix involving only one calculation, and would make a complete overhaul unnecessary. We've even got nine years in the system already, so that makes it even simpler.
What does everyone else think? Is it too simple for a government to grasp?
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