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Payment on Non seeded Acres?

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    #16
    We can talk about Capitalize or Socialize, but we are still
    the most highly subsidies industry in the world. It is always
    interesting on the US boards. On minute they are complaining
    about all the money going to auto industry and the next
    minute they are wonder when they will get the ACRE? payment.
    I heard this payment could be a high a $90/acre for soft
    wheat. Over the year the most capitalize group in the world,
    the US farmer, has got 100's of billions in all forms of
    subsidies.

    I have always like this difference between Capitalize and
    Socialize. Capitalize is when I get money and the other
    person doesn't. Socialize is when the other person
    gets the government money and I don't.

    As for SK99. I guess in two years I will find out whether
    you are right or wrong. Just like the drought payment some
    cattleman are getting this year.

    Comment


      #17
      Pars, That's in a pure capitalist or socialist society of which there is none. Canada is a blend of both and that will never change. Every social program we have is anti capitalist. The USA has massive socialist farm policies. China is more capitalist every day. Where is it pure capitalist and how has it been working? Farmers have "subsidized" society with low cost food forever(read socialist). Food is a absolute necessity but is NOT valued fairly till society is afraid of hunger. Farmers would rightly be paid BONUSES if we produce one cow or bushel TOO much, which prevents hunger, for any too little and some one is hungry. Instead a little too much and we are punished with lower prices.

      Comment


        #18
        The fact it took 5 years for the feds to come up with some money for the cattle producers is retarded at best. But if they hang the grain farmers the same way then farming as we know it, is done.

        Paul Martin, John Crowe and the like will be the people investing in farming and when they finally lose their money, who do you think they will go to?

        But its great to see that farmers as a whole will continue to argue about whether a paymment is needed or not because then the government can and will do nothing.

        If the unions and management of the auto sector would have not worked together the canadian economy would be sunk and many people know it. That is why it was better to payout the cause than deal with the effects of a broken auto sector.

        Comment


          #19
          When I get back all the money that the
          government has cost my farm over the years, I'll
          pay back every dollar of subsidy I've ever
          received.... Or they can just pay me the
          difference.

          Comment


            #20
            Parsley I agree with you on subsidies that we cry about every little thing and am personally little tired of it. One thing you are wrong about is subsidy on liscences for example I pay 5000 dollars in plates and auto insurance per year, for basically a little over 1 person employed full time and I don't spend full time in a half ton, grain truck, etc. So we pay our fair share of insurance.
            Another is the fuel road tax, we are exempted because we work in the field, same as lumber and fishing, we all claim some for personal use and pay tax on it. OK I speak for myself haha.
            I am against the notion that crap we have a dissaster every fricken dam year.
            We are competing against other nations subsidies which is the more real problem. After the last 10 years farming I don't get it that farmers don't prepare for a disaster. And I thought I had to wipe my last employees ass every time he took a shit,

            Comment


              #21
              Sask. 99 are you saying that if you voluntarily summerfallow you could have a structure change and if you could not plant because of too wet you would not? So who will judge that one? If there is a structure change on unplanted acres then that is a screw job. Saskfarmer you don't need a 140 per acre margin. Think about it, a farmer with a 140 per acre margin taking on 50,000 acres of land today that will not get planted, at his max payment will be 7 million. Pays for a little land rent I believe.

              Comment


                #22
                You know, hopper, if we want to keep any semblance at all of a free enterprise system, we have to be responsible for our farming decisions.

                Group after group after group lining up at the government trough will destroy our standard of living.

                Each one of us has a personal responsibility in agriculture, to choose what is decent.

                Decent.

                Pars

                Comment


                  #23
                  You know I was driving around today and I should not give out this information but what the hell. I have a neighbour that in the last 3 years grew barley and it went malt when malt was worth a lot, he then grew canola for 2 years in a row and lucked out a bit because he was not 0 till and grew 40 bushel crop back to back n ow has his land all planted. His ref margin is going to be one hell of a lot higher than anyone else's in the area like top. Now say he has a corporation. Other neighbor that has cropped 15000 acres for 8 years now and completely screwed up everything. Realizes what I just have and purchases farmer A's corp and Corp A purchases Screwed up farmers other corp. Now screwed up farmer has millions of dollars in coverage that he did not have before. How much will screwed up farmer pay farmer A for his 4 quarter corporation???

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Parsley some investors might actually be doing this.

                    Comment


                      #25
                      You make such an important point.

                      Sharpies.

                      The world is full of sharpies, and when government gets too much involved in agriculture, the sharpies siddle in.

                      Some farmers could occassionally make needed use of some farm aid, but it has gotten to the point where corporations of "investors" harvest farm aid 'schemes'.

                      So-called professionals are too easily able to transfer farming/farmer information these days.

                      Not-true-farmers harvesting government money targetted for agriculture, will skew agriculture. Pars

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Hopper, no one could get that high of a payment because of a couple reasons:
                        a) you would be over the cap per entity
                        b) I know how you arrived at the 7 mil but the program would grind the 7 mil down to about 4.5 mill because of the cost share tiers. Then the compensation from crop insurance would probably reduce it further by 2.0 mil because of the unseeded acre benefit.
                        c) Yes there is a structure change if you voluntarily summerfallow. This will be supported by your unseeded acre benefit claim from crop insurance.

                        If you are not in crop insurance, it would be in your best interest to report the acres as "unseedable" on the 2010 application.

                        The answers to all of these questions you are asking should have been explained to you by your accountant if he helps you will the forms.

                        Guys, I cannot not express how important it will be to have your 2009 and 2010 applications prepared properly (and even more critical in 2007 & 2008). Go find someone that knows what they are doing if keep driving until you find the right one.

                        Comment


                          #27
                          And as far as the $140 minimum reference margin, well you would have to meet with my guy at MNP to have that one explained to you.

                          From that list of customers sorted by RM that has ranges of reference margin per acre numbers from $50-$210, which farms do you think will weather the storm better...

                          Comment


                            #28
                            The lower reference margins will weather the storms better I hope because ours is in the low side.

                            Comment


                              #29
                              I'm still at a loss over why one needs a 140 buck margin to coast through a year of virtually no inputs which are allowable. I don't think MNP is necessarily speaking of guys who have no seed in the ground, I presume. I know I certainly don't need 140 buck ofmargin after paying my allowable inputs to get me through the next year, in a year of few costs. If a guy has spent money on a crop sure why not 140 bucks.

                              Comment


                                #30
                                Freewheat, a couple things:

                                a) Take a look at the right hand side of your statement A (non-allowable expenses). Yes, even if you don't plant a crop, you may have less repairs, contract work, etc etc but many of the categories will remain similar. You will still have some kind of depreciation factor as all the equipment is a year older. The one potentially large item is the draw for personal living. Depending on the size of the farm this could be $50 on its own. Just because a farm doesn't seed any acres, you will still have mouths to feed. If there is off farm employment that offsets this draw it is an advantage but then a different calculation. From my own farm which has minimal debt, majority owned land, it is tough to keep this section below $100.

                                b)Understanding the cost sharing tiers of the program and actual payments would be the other difference. Although $140 is being tossed around by the time you grind this to the correct cost share you are below a $100. This $100 is to cover all the cash costs and non cash costs (depreciation) that are not covered by agristability.

                                As it was explained to me, and its a good thing if your overhead costs are lower than the average or as expained above, this level is where the program adequately covers a farm's costs and will allow it to stay in the black with the tough year we are facing.

                                The higher the reference margin, the easier it allows a farm to maintain a profit. A lower margin only potentially means a producer may have to absorb a larger portion of the loss. It doesn't mean that a farm won't be around next year.

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