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Jeffery Simpson on Supply Management

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    Jeffery Simpson on Supply Management

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/jeffrey-simpson/it-hurts-dancing-to-supply-managements-tune/article2257216/


    <b>It hurts dancing to supply management’s tune</b>

    JEFFREY SIMPSON
    From Friday's Globe and Mail

    This week, the Harper government pushed through the Marketing Freedom for Grain Farmers Act to end the Canadian Wheat Board’s monopoly on selling wheat and barley. It also eliminated tariffs on 70 imported products, to the delight of Canadian manufacturers. Both steps, the government argued, would help Canadians compete internationally. Said Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz of the Wheat Board’s demise: “This is what we have been waiting for, [for] decades.”


    From the other side of the government’s mouth, during the same week, came affirmations of undying support for supply management for dairy and poultry producers, a system that mocks every principle for which this government is supposed to stand.

    Parliament Hill is alive these days with lobbyists for the supply-managed farmers, the most powerful lobby group in Canada. They see potential threats to their cozy arrangements, and are mobilizing against them.

    The threats are coming from possible trade agreements with the European Union and a group of Asian states.

    Nine countries around the Pacific have formed the Trans-Pacific Partnership. They’re determined to reach a ground-breaking free-trade deal, and have already conducted eight rounds of negotiations. The group includes the United States, Australia, New Zealand, a few countries in Southeast Asia and a couple in South America. The TPP could be the first step toward a much larger trade deal throughout the Pacific region. And any Asia-Pacific deal would be in Canada’s interest to join.

    After months of prevaricating, the Harper government announced two weeks ago that, yes, it was joining the TPP but would, of course, protect supply management in the negotiations. Except that other TPP countries don’t agree with Ottawa’s interpretation.

    For them, no country can join by establishing preconditions, as Canada wants. Said U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk this week: “Potential new entrants must be prepared to address a range of U.S. priorities and issues, and meet the high standards sought by all TPP partners.” Read: Canada and supply management.

    Said New Zealand Trade Minister Tim Groser in a recent speech: “This is not business as usual.” Subtext: Canada can’t claim an exemption for supply management before or during the negotiations. Canada has to be all in, or Canada will be all out.

    If Canada got an exemption for supply management, then Japan and South Korea would want one for their farmers. Other countries would then demand this or that break, and the TPP’s considerable ambitions would be watered down.

    The Harper government is obviously hoping that the U.S. (and other friendly countries such as Chile and Peru) will turn a blind eye to supply management and admit Canada, thereby brushing past more hard-line free-traders such as New Zealand and Australia.

    The Harper government knows the Americans have agriculture subsides aplenty. No U.S. administration will sacrifice those. So the Obama administration will wink, nod and put pressure on other participants to let in Canada, regardless of the U.S. Trade Representative’s hard-line stand.

    Once in, Canadian negotiators will perform this country’s well-worn act: Preach and seek free trade (see this week’s announcements) while protecting supply-managed farmers with stratospheric tariffs and tiny import quotas.

    The Harper government, like its predecessors, dances to the tune of the supply-managed farmers who have politically terrorized successive governments. In no other industry would a government allow tariffs that obviously make products more expensive for consumers and food processors. The worst-hit consumers, of course, are low-income Canadians, who spend a higher portion of their budget on food than wealthier Canadians. But do you ever hear a peep of protest about supply management from low-income Canadians’ erstwhile best friends in the NDP? They dance to the farmers’ music, too.

    Supply-managed farmers operate within a largely closed market, at prices they and their friends set, using non-tariff barriers when necessary to protect their fief. That’s why the system is a racket.

    That’s why other countries hate it. That’s why Canada has to pull out every diplomatic stop – without any guarantee of success – to gain admission to what might be the most important trade negotiations ever in the world’s fastest-growing region.

    #2
    Interesting to see one of the top writers at the Globe come out against supply management.

    Comment


      #3
      It is very interesting to see the sudden attack on supply management.

      2 days ago Simpson wrote an article about how the Reform party was still intact and bringing in all these ridiculous "market-based solutions" for the wheat board, gun registry elimination, and giving "marching orders" to get tough on crime. He was upset that even though the conservatives had a majority many years ago, they were considerate enough to not touch such things.

      Damn these reformers was the gist of the article.

      I wonder what his next article would say if the government announced today that supply management was over?

      Comment


        #4
        I wish the Reform Party was still alive. They would have gotten rid of the CWB and gun registry plus the CBC, NFBC, the human rights commision, human rights museum and hundreds of other hairbrained schemes that are costing tens if not hundreds of billions per year. What we have is a vast improvement from the Wayne Easter, Ralph Goodale days but we have a long ways to go.

        Comment


          #5
          You don't have to worry the reform party is still operating more than ever all these things will be gone until we are americans and the 51st state. Now that is not to say that some of what will be gone is not good either! But national medicare etc. will be next after this round. Anything oil will rule everything and everyone incuding property that will be the next round. If they did all this at once they would be smashed like a cockroach on the ground. They will go on slowly but surely until the country wakes up and either the liberals fold and a new central party emerges bringing in what canadians really are.

          Comment


            #6
            Hey Malta for your list of hairbrained things to get rid of for the Reformatorys you forgot to mention Defence Ministers using $25,000 per hour military search and rescue helicopters for their personal taxis and lying about it. Mckay looks like the fool he is. The Harper Government is well on the way to defeating itself.

            The other thing to keep in mind is this is a pretty diverse country that Harper has to keep together. Most people live in cities and tend not to have redneck views as shared by many western, mostly rural voters.

            Harper got a majority with only 40%. The other 60% of voters supported other views of this country. And many young people don't vote. So thinking that somehow your worldview is widely shared is an error.

            Comment


              #7
              Lies, damned lies and statistics.

              Just like the .000001% of the population involved in the "occupy" movement represent 99%.

              Comment


                #8
                The knives are out for supply management. There are a whole lot of nervous farmers who are going to lose their exalted position as a state protected industry. There is going to be a big bill compensating for quota.

                It is so funny to see to see all the freemarket CWB haters on agriville defend the Conservative support for supply management.
                The Cons are dancing around trying to figure out what to do.

                If having a strong and viable dairy and poultry industry causes low income consumers to pay more for these foods perhaps we should address the root of the problem which is low income. The small higher costs can easily be fixed with raising the tax system basic personal exemptions or tax credits.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Please list those people who are in full support of supply management on this forum chuck. Thanks.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I am in full support of supply management for the milk, egg and poultry producers and have been from day one. One of the smartest moves ever made in Canada by our nitwit politicians.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I'm a consumer on the way home from USA
                      airport, stopped in at grocery store in a tiny town
                      to pick up milk and bread after being away 9
                      days. the butter was $US2.99 lb. In local
                      smaltown before I left, butter was $CDN5.48 lb

                      I bought ten pounds in USA.

                      How $much do I love my dairy farmer?

                      Uhhuh..... Not enough. Pars

                      Comment


                        #12
                        freeyourmilk.ca

                        Comment


                          #13
                          The real irony is that most of the subsidy gets capitalized into the milk quota, the value of which retires with the dairy farmer who was originally granted the quota in the first place. The only thing that keeps it going is ever increasing prices, which in turn increases the quota value for newer entrants. Almost like a giant pyramid scheme, with consumers funding it.

                          Supply management may have started out well intentioned, but results are deviating further and further from desirable for society as a whole. In effect, it is becoming an idiotic system that requires the poor to subsidize the rich. Much like the Monty Python "Dennis Moore" skit.

                          Comment


                            #14

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Parsley, when you eat your lower cost butter remember that it will come from cows that were injected with BST. Not to mention the scale of some of the US industry is very large. Even some of the "organic" had up to 5000 cows. Non organic dairys are fed every conceivable source of waste products including recycled chicken manure in some states such as california. It may be cheap but is the quality good compared to grass and grain fed? Mainstream americain cheese really is not very good. Price isn't everything.

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