posted Aug 20, 2007 10:12
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tom4cwb I'll give it a try if you like but it would be a good idea to get a second opinion.
If the board does conciously or subconciously enforce grain farm subsidization of the feed industry I'd have to assume that there would be two main causes of it
; the first is that we as grain farmers elect cattlemen to represent us on the board and can't see the bias put into the system in that way.
; the second would be that sucessive federal conservative and liberal governments have been enamored of the dollars put into the economy through having a large cattle and hog and poultry industry, and so have instructed the board through their appointees to give support to that sector. I don't doubt that the respective feeder associations have succeeded in putting ample lobby pressure on the governments to do this.
At the same time grain growers are divided against each other because we are all fed up with the low prices. As well we will go out and get higher yielding varieties, throw the fertilizer and chemicals to the field in an effort to out produce, well, ourselves basically. I think we should let governments and agribusiness multinationals know that we understand that it's societies bias against the primary producer more than anything else that's hurting the grain growers.
Remember the market assumes that because we are overproducing we can afford to. Therefore it will try to offer less in the honoured tradition of efficiency gains.
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tom4cwb I'll give it a try if you like but it would be a good idea to get a second opinion.
If the board does conciously or subconciously enforce grain farm subsidization of the feed industry I'd have to assume that there would be two main causes of it
; the first is that we as grain farmers elect cattlemen to represent us on the board and can't see the bias put into the system in that way.
; the second would be that sucessive federal conservative and liberal governments have been enamored of the dollars put into the economy through having a large cattle and hog and poultry industry, and so have instructed the board through their appointees to give support to that sector. I don't doubt that the respective feeder associations have succeeded in putting ample lobby pressure on the governments to do this.
At the same time grain growers are divided against each other because we are all fed up with the low prices. As well we will go out and get higher yielding varieties, throw the fertilizer and chemicals to the field in an effort to out produce, well, ourselves basically. I think we should let governments and agribusiness multinationals know that we understand that it's societies bias against the primary producer more than anything else that's hurting the grain growers.
Remember the market assumes that because we are overproducing we can afford to. Therefore it will try to offer less in the honoured tradition of efficiency gains.
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