In the Nov 13th Issue of The Western Producer the leading headline is "New Ag Program Pondered".
Ag Minister Lyle Vanclief proposals for revamping existing ag programs are summarized.
Point 3, "A requirement that farmers who decide to join sign a long-term commit to stay in the program"
is interesting.
No one is more guilty of not staying with any Ag programs for any length of time than governments
themselves. There have been Lift, Stabilization, Grip, Nisa, Aida, Nisa .... to name a few. Most have
been dropped or changed radically from what they started with. Too often governments haven't done
their homework in designing these programs, so they were fair and sustainable; and each program was
mostly in tune to the philosophy of whichever party happened to be in power.
The Liberals programs are not usually beneficial to the larger grain farmer consisting of only 20%
of the total, given their tendency to cap most programs so only the average size farm gets full benefits.
The PC's tended to drop these programs and come up with programs like GRIP which were better at treating all
farms equally, but still not thought out enough to be fair or sustainable.
Now are we to trust the Liberals with coming up with a new "Mother" of all programs that we should just 'take' or 'leave'
with a long-term commitment? I don't think so.
They should allow a lot of input from many farmers this time, or it will only be another short lived program again.
It might be better to have most of these proposals discussed in detail by farmers rather than just spokespersons before
implementing them. Maybe then the end result might be compatible with what all farmers need and taxpayers can afford.
Maybe some linkage is needed with trade issues. After all if it wasn't for the unfair subsidies in the grain sector, the
huge problems that sector faces wouldn't likely be as bad. If a world trade agreement has been agreed to that is unfair
to one sector that sector should be compensated. How can diversification be seen as good when it can result in bankruptcy
with the poor to non-existent crop insurance coverage we have. With present rules, you need 10 years to develop adequate coverage
for each crop grown. The result is that 2 farmers farming side by side on the same quality land, using the same inputs and farming practices
can have insurance coverage's where one is double the others. The Grip program had this same inequity built into it.
It's not right that a program like CFIP treats each sector alike, assuming that averaging out their income is fair. If for example
the grain sector has had to compete with Common Market and USA subsidies for 15 years, how can an average net income be fair?
Until these huge mistakes are spotted before the programs are implemented they are wasting their time coming out with any new programs.
Ag Minister Lyle Vanclief proposals for revamping existing ag programs are summarized.
Point 3, "A requirement that farmers who decide to join sign a long-term commit to stay in the program"
is interesting.
No one is more guilty of not staying with any Ag programs for any length of time than governments
themselves. There have been Lift, Stabilization, Grip, Nisa, Aida, Nisa .... to name a few. Most have
been dropped or changed radically from what they started with. Too often governments haven't done
their homework in designing these programs, so they were fair and sustainable; and each program was
mostly in tune to the philosophy of whichever party happened to be in power.
The Liberals programs are not usually beneficial to the larger grain farmer consisting of only 20%
of the total, given their tendency to cap most programs so only the average size farm gets full benefits.
The PC's tended to drop these programs and come up with programs like GRIP which were better at treating all
farms equally, but still not thought out enough to be fair or sustainable.
Now are we to trust the Liberals with coming up with a new "Mother" of all programs that we should just 'take' or 'leave'
with a long-term commitment? I don't think so.
They should allow a lot of input from many farmers this time, or it will only be another short lived program again.
It might be better to have most of these proposals discussed in detail by farmers rather than just spokespersons before
implementing them. Maybe then the end result might be compatible with what all farmers need and taxpayers can afford.
Maybe some linkage is needed with trade issues. After all if it wasn't for the unfair subsidies in the grain sector, the
huge problems that sector faces wouldn't likely be as bad. If a world trade agreement has been agreed to that is unfair
to one sector that sector should be compensated. How can diversification be seen as good when it can result in bankruptcy
with the poor to non-existent crop insurance coverage we have. With present rules, you need 10 years to develop adequate coverage
for each crop grown. The result is that 2 farmers farming side by side on the same quality land, using the same inputs and farming practices
can have insurance coverage's where one is double the others. The Grip program had this same inequity built into it.
It's not right that a program like CFIP treats each sector alike, assuming that averaging out their income is fair. If for example
the grain sector has had to compete with Common Market and USA subsidies for 15 years, how can an average net income be fair?
Until these huge mistakes are spotted before the programs are implemented they are wasting their time coming out with any new programs.
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