1. North American market completely free no CWB, if you have a buyer in Canada, US or Mexico no one can stop you selling to them at the price you negotiate.
2. The rest of the world is retained for the CWB and you play by their rules. But the CWB will be completely farmer directed there will be no federal appointees. It will become more a producer body. We might lose preferred interest rates that it currently has. It wouldn't be ran by bureaucrats anymore but the best people we could hire to work on our behalf. However there would be oversite to insure "professional managers" wouldn't run it into the ground as they did with the pools.
3. The government would add a permenent percentage (on the price of a loaf of bread or a bottle of beer or liquor) to the retail price of everything our grain is made with in Canada and this money would go directly to the farmers based upon how much they have contributed on a pro rated basis. This would apply even if they use grain from another country in their production (otherwise the producers would just start using foreign grains which then would be cheaper). In exchange, we would end any and all other subsidies and "rights" we currently get and we'd have to play like other industries do.
If we all could agree on this and as an industry take this to the respective governments as a group. I bet we could make changes. If however we continue to bicker those who take advantage of us now will be the only ones who are pleased because if we are to busy arguing with each other we have no time to go after them.
In closing rather than get into yet another "pissing match" lets argue the merits and try to fine tune a way that we all can compromise but all win. I leave it to you.
2. The rest of the world is retained for the CWB and you play by their rules. But the CWB will be completely farmer directed there will be no federal appointees. It will become more a producer body. We might lose preferred interest rates that it currently has. It wouldn't be ran by bureaucrats anymore but the best people we could hire to work on our behalf. However there would be oversite to insure "professional managers" wouldn't run it into the ground as they did with the pools.
3. The government would add a permenent percentage (on the price of a loaf of bread or a bottle of beer or liquor) to the retail price of everything our grain is made with in Canada and this money would go directly to the farmers based upon how much they have contributed on a pro rated basis. This would apply even if they use grain from another country in their production (otherwise the producers would just start using foreign grains which then would be cheaper). In exchange, we would end any and all other subsidies and "rights" we currently get and we'd have to play like other industries do.
If we all could agree on this and as an industry take this to the respective governments as a group. I bet we could make changes. If however we continue to bicker those who take advantage of us now will be the only ones who are pleased because if we are to busy arguing with each other we have no time to go after them.
In closing rather than get into yet another "pissing match" lets argue the merits and try to fine tune a way that we all can compromise but all win. I leave it to you.
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