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Drifts on the Doorsteps

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    #31
    The OWB is effectively a non-participant in the marketing of Ontario wheat and it's safe to say that basically all Ontario farmers are OK with that. The little bit of wheat that is grown in Quebec is mandated to be sold through the Regie de something (my french is terrible) and I can't imagine that all Quebec farmers are Ok with that, but that's how they "democratically" voted.

    I haven't a clue what the rules and regs are with regards to exporting seed wheat and barley but suspect that the volumes are fairly small (less than 100,000 tonnes ???). You tell me.

    I'd also guess that the majority of exported feed wheat and feed barley is done through the regular channels (CWB direct or through AE's) and very little is done as manufactured feed. Stand to be corrected so point me to the stats/numbers that would suggest otherwise. charliep can act as arbitrator on this one.

    Long story short, maybe a voluntary CWB survives in an open market, maybe it doesn't, but that's the beauty of an open market. But "dual" it ain't and I don't think the choice people did to rely on that sort of weasel words.

    Comment


      #32
      Thanks Kodiak for bringing up the task force report. I am very familar with it and refer everyone to page 10 section 2 "what is marketing choice." Specifically: "“Marketing Choice” is a better term to describe the new environment than “dual
      marketing”. The latter term implies to some that the existing marketing approach (a CWB with
      monopoly powers) could co-exist with an open market approach. This is not possible."

      This is my point. Yet people (now jdepape) still insist that a dual market can work Without a monopoly you have an open market. And whenever I hear someone say dual market I ask how it would work. No one has ever been able to describe anything other than an open market to me. I am still seeking an answer.

      And you last question is basically the same as my first question to jdepape. Why is the CWB monopoly not working. Because I think we can agree if the CWB is not working as a monopoly chances are it will never be able to compete in an open market; as Ontario and Australia have discovered.

      Comment


        #33
        2000 googled handy:

        Source: Animal Nutrition Association of Canada. 2000.


        •Total sales represent over CDN$3.5 billion (global shipments of livestock and poultry feed products, excluding pet food)
        •Approximately 8800 people employed by industry in manufacturing units

        •Estimated total complete feed equivalent required to feed all livestock and poultry in Canada is 21 to 23 million metric tonnes

        •Based on complete feed equivalent, requirements by volume for various species are:

        ◦Hog 36%

        ◦Beef 29%

        ◦Dairy 18%

        ◦Poultry 14%

        ◦Other 3%

        •Approximately 50% of the overall complete feed equivalent volume required to feed all livestock and poultry in Canada is manufactured on non-commercial on-farm mixing establishments

        •Swine, dairy and poultry feeds account for approximately 85% of the complete feeds manufactured and sold by commercial manufacturers in Canada

        •There are an estimated 520 commercial feed manufacturing establishments in Canada:

        ◦Atlantic 5%

        ◦Quebec 34%

        ◦Ontario 33%

        ◦Prairies 23%

        ◦British Columbia 5%

        •The industry relies on imports from the United States, Europe and Asia for the majority of the high value single micro-ingredients, i.e. vitamins, trace minerals, amino acids, animal health pharmaceuticals and other micro feed additives, used in most feed products as there is virtually no vitamin production in Canada and the pharmaceutical fine chemical industry is limited.

        •Exports into the United States are primarily confined to cross-border movement of complete feeds and originate mainly in eastern Canada from Ontario and Quebec and in the west primarily from Alberta. Exports of value added specialty products such as milk replacers, mink and fox feeds, horse feeds and some specialty micro-premixes, are expanding in Mexico, Latin America, South America, Europe and Asia.

        •The Canadian feed industry is comprised of establishments that vary in size and manufacturing capacity from relatively small mills to large sophisticated and vertically integrated operations. Annual sales of operations vary from $1 million to over $130 million.

        Comment


          #34
          First of all it's Asinine that we are forced to vote on private property.

          Second
          Since Goodales Liberals are making us vote on property who are we calling farmers? Wayne Easter himself told me that the 40 tonne limit is reasonable. Why has it not passed and we could get paid sooner.

          dmlfarmer I want to see the CWB's plan for barley they obviously have one after 2007. They were not going to close the doors, and flying by the seat of their pants is probably not it.

          Comment


            #35
            Another NFU talking point is that they want to see more farmer control on the Board. They are floating Goodale`s plan to limit govt control by having the BOD appoint their own experts to sit at the table.

            Point is that they forget what has happened in the past and how many good qualified directors have quit over all the BS politics and the lefty insatiable desire to meddle in day to day affairs.

            What would stop them from appointing Stewart Wells as their Agricultural policy advisers

            He obviously has the credentials they are looking for.
            Tongue planted firmly in cheek

            As long as tax payers are on the hook for this shit show the Govt will have say to protect the purse.
            Let us free and you can appoint any one you want.
            OR better yet
            Show me how you plan to earn my business, by making me more money and reducing not adding to my marketing stress.
            Let me vote on how much business I may add to your business and then it may work.

            All most done ranting, but as long as the monopoly is as dysfunctional as it is you will NOT attract the directors WE need most.

            I`m out.

            Comment


              #36
              Dmlfarmer:

              OK - here goes. Sorry for the length.

              Re China malt – re-read my comment. The import tariff on malt doesn’t play into this at all. China expanded their malt capacity just to export it. Malt houses were built on the coast to facilitate the acceptance of foreign barley and the EXPORT of malt to other countries in South East Asia. My point was that we (Canada) should be exporting more malt to that region.

              Your point on the shifts in demand growth is correct but, to put my comments in context, you have to go back to 2006-07, the year I was talking about – the year when the CWB met with Ritz and the malt companies said they wouldn’t invest in Canada. Back then, it was estimated that the world was short about 500,000 tonnes of malt capacity. These multinational companies were deciding at the time where in the world the new capacity would be built. Canada was a perfect location but in their approach to location selection, these companies chose an ABC approach – Anywhere But Canada. Because of the single desk – which is what they told the CWB at the time.

              I didn’t ignore the fact that capacity has been added elsewhere. Much of it was added after 2007.

              Sorry to trouble you with my use of the term “democratically” – I didn’t mean anything by it other than to describe an approach to an issue where everyone has equal input. Trust me - it’s applicable here.

              I guess where I’d agree with you is democracy would be applied if their stated wishes were implemented. As it is, the CWB has left the majority of farmers impotent on that particular question.

              I understand your comment about how farmers used the election of directors as a proxy for a vote on the “single desk” issue, but I don’t agree with that conclusion. In the last directors election I was a scrutineer – monitoring the handling of the ballots by MNP. Time and time again I saw ballots that selected a strong “single desk” candidate as the #1 choice and a strong “dual market” candidate as the #2 choice (or the other way around). If that election was a vote on the single desk issue, it didn’t show up on the ballots.

              To your questions: Why does the CWB not work? What changes would have to be made to or in the CWB so Canadian farmers would benefit from collectively negotiating?

              This is a big one. I’ll give you a little teaser here and write it up later as a full commentary later.
              - The CWB does not have a monopoly, yet it acts like it does. (Yes, if a buyer wants Canadian wheat, it must go to the CWB, but that doesn’t give them a monopoly. But nobody NEEDS Canadian wheat, so the CWB competes. Usually on price.)
              - The CWB does not have market clout, yet it acts like it does. (4% of global production and 14% of world trade does not fit with the definition of “market clout”.)
              - On barley, the CWB is a bit player, handling only 20% of the crop – if that.
              - On durum – quite frankly I’m dismayed.

              To your question: how do you see the dual market working?

              Another biggy. I won’t comment on AWB directly but think of this. So often we automatically assume that the entity (this time it’s AWB, another time it’s Ontario Wheat Producers Marketing Board) couldn’t survive because it didn’t have its market power anymore.

              I look at it the other way. If the AWB shrank, maybe it shrank to a size equal to the size of the “market” for the service it was offering. There’s nothing saying that it has to be everything to everyone.

              In western Canada we’ve seen about 40% of farmers (or less) favour the single desk. For arguments sake, let’s assume these 40% represent 15% of the barley production and we go to a dual market, and this 40% continue to work with the CWB. It wouldn’t be surprising at all if the CWB handled 15% of the barley. In fact, it wouldn’t be a sign of failure, rather an indication of the demand for its services.

              Actually, I think the market share of the CWB in a dual market would be even smaller. Take a look at my blog:
              <a href=http://cwbmonitor.blogspot.com/2010/10/why-barley.html>Why Barley?</a>

              (Hope that worked...)

              As for a plan, again, I’ll leave that for another time. (And yes, I do have ideas of how it will work. But I’ve written far too much already here.)

              On your question “How do I know an open market supporter also won't override farmer's interest simply because of ideology?”

              I guess you don’t. But I just think that the evidence is so overwhelming that the single desk is not creating wealth, why would getting rid of it be overriding a farmer’s interest?

              Comment


                #37
                cityguy,
                I am saying that the CWB, through legislation, once marketed every kernel of wheat and barley in Canada.

                Monopoly

                The monopoly was reduced by legislation. A 'designated area' was instead formed.

                At that point in time, a Canadian monopoluy died.

                Did the CWB fail? NO!

                That's my point.

                Easterns began marketing.

                Surely you cannot argue that more than one marketer was born out of a Monopoly.If you do, go to bed and sleep on it.

                The CWB are worse than bloody bedbugs ....impossible to get rid of, in your face, and your farm.

                They will survive with fifty farmers. All staff won't. Pars

                Comment


                  #38
                  To me an open market is where all participants are, for all intents and purposes, offering the same value proposition.

                  A dual market, on the other hand, is an open market where one participant offers a different value proposition than all the rest. With the CWB, the different value proposition would be up to the CWB, but I assume it would include pooling and/or some form of coop approach.

                  By definition, the single desk cannot exist in a dual market.

                  And that's ok.

                  Comment


                    #39
                    From CGC:

                    Exports of barley malt were 656 thousand tonnes (724 thousand in 2007-2008). Country of destination not available due to confidentiality."

                    Conversion rates to grain equivalents, bushels to metric tonne: Barley malt – 1.339

                    Comment


                      #40
                      depappy.

                      China has a single desk.

                      Does Canada?

                      Comment


                        #41
                        jdepape: thanks for the response. But do you have any emperial data that supports your statement of China exports of malt and that the higher tariff on malt than barley has no effect? USDA world trade figurues do not support this claim as China malt and barley exports have dropped last 2 years and have trended down since 2000. Furthermore, domestic consumption of barley and malt in China have increased steadily since 2000 as would be expected with the estimated 5% annual increase in beer consumption.

                        Other than that I will wait with high expectations for your expanded responses to my questions. Given your teasers to my questions, I have high hopes.

                        I will just make a couple more comments. First, in a democracy, what the "majority" wants and what they get rarely matches. It is quite amazing as a country we currently have a government and leader in power who had the support at the polls of only 37.65% of the 59.1% of the electorate who voted. The same arguments you use against the single desk I hear everyday from people upset with Harper and the Conservatives and which I think I would still hear even if they had a majority as I doubt we will ever see more than 50% of Canadians agreeing on a government. But despite its flaws, democracy is much better than all the allternatives. We each have the opportunity to freely discuss and attempt to change what we don't like. The only threat to democracy is that people will not accept the decision of the people made legally at the ballot box.

                        Second, bj, I also disagree with voter eligibility rules and gust, I too question the decisions being made, and to everyone else I agree the board costs to much. But if farmers vote to end the monopoly, I have no problem with that. I do have a problem when 3rd parties, such as the foreign owned maltsters tell us we have to get rid of the monopoly or they wont build here. (Sort of like the pro sports team telling a city either you build us a new facility or we will leave.) These are business, and if there is a potential profit to be made, they will build; especially if as jdepape says the CWB is not getting a premium, and actually competing on price. Therefore why are these industries not lining up to build instead of fleeing. Or are there other locations where they can make even bigger profits where they have and are building? Or do they just want to be kissed too when screwing the farmer more.

                        But the most important point jdepape makes in his response was: "But nobody NEEDS Canadian wheat..." and I couldn't agree more. In truth, Cargill, LD, or even Viterra could care less if they get my grain, or any individual Canadians grain. Individually farmers have zero market power. While jdepape may be right and the CWB does not have pricing power, they do have market power with 14 percent of world trade. I am still trying to figure out if we can afford to lose this limited market power should the CWB go the way of the OWB and the AWB.

                        Comment


                          #42
                          this is the way i see it, under the cwb there are 4 markets for our barley. 3 of them under the wheat boards control domestic malt, export malt and export feed. the domestic feed market is outside the wheat boards control but not its influence.

                          the domestic feed market is captive for feed grain producers but not to feed grain users who have the freedom to import feed grains.

                          so who benefits? certainly not the producers.

                          Comment


                            #43
                            dmlfarmer:

                            My source on the Chinese malt exports is a senior exec in the malting industry. His source is the General Administration of Customs of the People's Republic of China.

                            The import tariff on malt is of no consequence here because importing malt is not an option for these companies - they import barley and produce malt - not for domestic use, but for export to other countries in south east Asia.

                            I'm not here to defend the "foreign owned maltsters" but you are echoing an argument I hear a lot - that price is the most important factor in the decision to build (or expand). Sure, maltsters want to buy at a good price, but what many farmers don't consider is that maltsters are extremely quality conscious and the ability to service clients is extremely important to them. The problems they have with the single desk is not price - at least not the price they need to pay. They want the price they are paying to be transmitted to farmers so farmers know the value they are willing to provide. And they want a system where they can actually depend on delivery of barley.
                            Put it this way - quality and logistics are so important, they will pay more to get it. Or they will go where they can get it. The single desk gets in their way - not on price - on dependable supply.

                            You misinterpreted my comment "nobody NEEDS Canadian wheat". I meant offshore end-users, not Canadian grain handlers.

                            I'd love to know how you see the CWB's "market power" translated to you in terms of a per-acre return. Show me your empirical evidence.

                            Also, how does the CWB exert this "market power" on its customers?

                            BTW - Canada's market share is 14% - but that includes exports from Eastern Canada, so the CWB doesn't control that much. A small point, but worth noting.

                            Comment


                              #44
                              <i>It is quite amazing as a country we currently have a government and leader in power who had the support at the polls of only 37.65% of the 59.1% of the electorate who voted.</i>
                              Chretien had a 172 to 129 <b>majority</b> with 40.2% of the popular vote. That’s the way it is.
                              Fortunately we have a constitution protecting citizens from the tyranny of the majority.
                              <b>Unfortunately</b> the constitution doesn’t include the protection against confiscation of property from select geographical areas within Canada. Having someone else being able to vote away my property rights is a far greater injustice than minority governments ruling with 37% of the popular vote.

                              <i>when 3rd parties, such as the foreign owned maltsters tell us we have to get rid of the monopoly or they wont build here.</i>
                              We don’t have the CWB <s>ruining</s> controlling canola and there are new crushing facilities being built in Canada; to the benefit of farmers, I might add.

                              Thanks to jdepape for taking the time to drop in on Agriville!

                              Comment


                                #45
                                DML
                                two comments
                                You don't want third parties to dictate the future of
                                the CWB but the current voter eligibility rules
                                mandate that third parties have the right to vote in
                                CWB elections. In can be argued that CWB elections
                                are not necessarily reflective of the views of
                                farmers.
                                Second comment
                                You claim that while the Board does not have
                                pricing power it does have market power. If market
                                power is not pricing power then just what is it?

                                Comment

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