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All farmers are equal – but some are more equal than others

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    All farmers are equal – but some are more equal than others

    All farmers are equal – but some are more equal than others
    BARRIE McKENNA
    OTTAWA— From Monday's Globe and Mail
    Published Sunday, Oct. 23

    Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz says he’s all about putting “farmers first.”

    At first blush, this sounds like a pretty reasonable motto for an ag minister raised on a Saskatchewan farm. Who doesn’t like farmers, after all? They do tough, essential work that feeds us all.

    The catch is that “farmers first” often implies “consumers last.” And what Mr. Ritz really means is that some farmers come first, but not all farmers.
    More from Barrie McKenna

    Harper lauds end to wheat board monopoly
    The Paterson GlobalFoods Incorporated Winnipeg facility.

    As the Harper government pushes ahead with long-promised legislation to overhaul the Canadian Wheat Board, Ottawa’s incoherent and intellectually dishonest farm policy is now on full display.

    The government is stripping the wheat board of its grain-marketing monopoly on the grounds that farmers deserve free and open markets, like their brethren in potatoes, cattle, fruits and vegetables. Mr. Ritz insists farmers should choose how they market their products so they can “attract investment, encourage innovation and create value-added jobs.”

    But that doesn’t apply to dairy, egg, chicken and turkey farmers. These farmers operate in a hermetically sealed regime marked by tight central control of production, the near-total exclusion of imports, and higher prices for everyone.

    And the government has made it quite clear that’s the way it should be. Prime Minister Stephen Harper says he’s ready to defend the so-called supply management system, now and forever.

    Beyond history, it’s hard to figure out what makes a dairy farmer so different from a cattle rancher or an apple grower. If open markets are so clearly in the best interests of grain farmers in Western Canada, why aren’t they also good for the dairy farmers of Quebec and Ontario?

    The answer, of course, is politics in a country where rural areas are still overly represented in the House of Commons. Supply management has become a proxy for rural entitlement and protection of family farms – a message that helped the Conservatives to a sweep outside the major cities in Southern Ontario in the May election. And by retaining the regime, Mr. Harper presumably calculates he will keep those seats four years from now.

    There is no sound economic or policy rationale for keeping supply management. The government is sacrificing the interests of 34 million Canadians for the sake of fewer than 15,000 dairy and poultry farmers.

    For a government that claims to put the economy first, the farm-vote calculation is cynical.

    Supply management is “a blight on the economic landscape and totally unjustifiable in a world of skyrocketing global dairy prices,” the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development concluded in its 2008 review of the Canadian economy.

    Every year the distortions caused by the system grow larger. Canadians may not realize it when they go to the grocery store, but they’re paying twice the world average for dairy products – and up to three times what Americans pay. That’s a hidden $3-billion a year tax on all of us.

    Roughly half the money flows back to dairy farmers, making them richer than other farmers, who work just as hard. Bloated government agencies and marketing boards soak up a significant chunk of the rest.

    That’s only part of the cost to consumers. Because Canada must restrict imports to maintain this closed system, our trading partners block the sale of certain Canadian products in their markets. Canada has been shunned from ongoing talks toward a regional Asia-Pacific trade pact because Ottawa won’t budge on supply management.

    The OECD also pointed out that supply management hits the poor the hardest because they spend proportionately more on food than other Canadians.

    Nor is supply management saving the family farm. Indeed, the system keeps young farmers out of the business by creating prohibitive barriers to entry. When the supply-management system was started in the early 1970s, farmers were allocated free production quotas. If you want to buy a cow and sell milk now, it will cost you an average of $26,000 per cow to buy quota. A typical dairy farm could have $2-million or more needlessly tied up in production quotas.

    In all, Canadian farmers have $28-billion of their assets invested in supply management quotas, representing 2 per cent of the country’s gross domestic product. And every year an average of more than 2,500 farms disappear as small operations give way to fewer, larger, factory farms.

    Forget all the economic distortions and the steep consumer price. Supply management goes against the Conservative government’s own clearly articulated free-market farm principles and vigorous defence of property rights.

    Mr. Harper and Mr. Ritz readily acknowledge that free markets drive innovation, spur investment and create value-added jobs. Yet they are ready to go to the wall to defend a Soviet-style system for some farmers that does just the opposite.

    #2
    Chuck Chuck do you once again need a lesson on the difference between Dairy and Poultry Supply Management and The CWB Monopoly.

    Comment


      #3
      chuckChuck has to use this tactic. He can't demonstrate an economic benefit of single desk or make a business case for a farm manager using the CWB services in any circumstances other than government enforced regulation.

      Comment


        #4
        Do these articles and opinion pieces mean that the left is now willing to get rid of supply management if the conservatives leave the wheat board the way it has been? Chucky?

        Why the sudden interest in the inequalities of the supply management system? These same people were crying that the conservatives were going to gut the dairy and poultry sector a few years ago. What gives?

        Is there something within the cwb system that requires it's preservation at any cost? What could it be? Would a full audit reveal such a thing?

        Comment


          #5
          chuck, why was the formerCWB monopoly only
          forced upon farmers in the designated area? Talk
          about hypocrisy! Why the need for consistency now?
          Can you please answer this question chuck. Why was
          wheat different in Ontario?

          Comment


            #6
            How do you supply manage a product(wht/bly) that is 100% at risk from mother nature in both production and quality? All other supply managed products(dairy,poultry) are in a closed system where both quality and quantity are 98% controlled.

            Comment


              #7
              And 100% of the milk producers want to be
              in supply management to boot.

              Comment


                #8
                It is often hard for me to understand what chuck is trying to say.
                If it is anti- hypocrisy, I'm for it.
                As for motive, I'm suspicous. Damned if I want to present a diagnosis yet though.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Charlie and others. Did you forget the study Kraft, Furtan, T... did? What about Richard Gray and Andy Schmitz papers on the CWB benefits? All found benefits from the single desk didn't they? KFT had access to actual contracts.

                  Charlie since you are a trained economist one question. Can monopolies extract higher rents (premiums) than multiple sellers? What does the literature say on that question?

                  The answer is obvious.

                  Why did Brad Wall worry about BHP breaking away from Canpotex?

                  And before anybody says the CWB doesn't have a monopoly. Remember it has a monopoly on Canadian wheat. If you want Canadian wheat you currently have once choice. With Durum that amounts up to 70% of the exportable world supplies in some years.

                  Further, unless you have access to all the sales data and the competitors bids in all our markets over any long period you can't tell how the CWB is doing.

                  Comparing only to US prices which is one market out of many is not a sufficient analysis of performance.

                  If you think it is please explain.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I'm all for ditching supply mismanagement, but it is substantially different from the CWB.

                    When was the last time anyone got jailed for trying to cross the border with a load of eggs? Of course, this doesn't happen for the simple reason that thanks to the sky-high prices foisted on us by supply mismanagement, Canadian poultry and dairy products are literally priced out of any and all export markets.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      "...unless you have access to all the sales data and the competitors bids in all our markets over any long period you can't tell how the CWB is doing."

                      Fine then. Why not make this data accessible to the public so that we can decide on the answer in an open and transparent manner? Since at present only a select few people can even look at this data, surely this criticism applies to the vast majority of the monopoly's defenders as well.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Chuck chuck. Compare commodity prices
                        north and south of the border, all
                        commodity prices. Then see which one is
                        the odd one out, IE different. Get back to
                        me, o.k.?

                        Comment


                          #13
                          chuckie, Darryl has passed but that doesn't mean the report wasn't cheesy. Everyone knows the report only looked at prices the CWB got, not what the farmgate prices to farmers were. Although the Schmitzes hold great barn dances in that old barn at Moose Jaw, their report sucked in the same way.

                          As has been pointed out many times, the cost of operating the board more than negates any real or perceived benefit from the single buying desk. Besides, no one has the right to tell me what I can or can't do with my own product.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            The wheat is not a monopoly either in the world or Canada. Western Canadian wheat represents about 12 percent of world wheat trade. It does not sell eastern Canadian wheat.

                            It is a monopsony in western Canada in the export and domestic human consumption markets.

                            None of the studies you reference talk about the ability of the CWB to exert monopoly power. The arguments in the studies are around the ability of the CWB to manage western Canadian farmers access to the market and price differentiate among customers. Lots of disagreement with this concept. Not really all that well tested in the real world except among academics. Studies such as the Informa Economics one (2008) have shown the single desk have under performed world markets.

                            Also, the studies are about the single desk and not able individual farmers which would include cash flow and the forced carryover of inventory between crop years.

                            On the durum front, you are right western Canada does have significant (not total) market share in terms of trade. Even the CWB does not control weather however and ultimately, it is available supplies that control price. I would venture single desk provides no value to durum in sprite of Canada' dominance in this market but there will be arguements.

                            On the farmer side of durum, however, the answer might be different again. I note the difference between US spot prices and CWB pooled prices. Even a bigger issue is the cost of managing fixed price contract risk which remains at $2/bu. You have been asked to explain why this is acceptable. In the new world, it will not be. The CWB operations/risk management sides will have to be a lot more creative than they are today. Thats what competition does - gets rid of poor products and encourages innovation.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              <i>"Can monopolies extract higher rents (premiums) than multiple sellers?"</i>
                              Yes, but it's been pointed out many times before that the only place the CWB has a monopoly is within Canada, and even that is not a true monopoly, as wheat can be freely imported. Buyers can still access wheat, but at a higher price due to the extra freight. And we wonder why there hasn't been any new durum plants built here, dooming us to export where we have no monopoly.

                              <b>IF</b> (big if) Canadian wheat has some kind of brand appeal, why do we need the state trading agency to capture an export price premium?

                              Comment

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