Agriculture can learn from the US elections. Vision equals Youth coming out to participate.
Young people need a vision, and hope.
Who gives our youth a good feeling about farming? Whose vision do they look at and say, "Oh boy, that's where I'm headed. What a future!"
Most of the time it is about tightening up and tickering on the same old, same old.
Few have even mentioned YOUTH.
One particular presentation did and it's worth repeating:
QUOTE:
Politics of Grain:Canadian Agriculture Policy Framework (APF)
I presented the following remarks to Canada's Standing Committee on Agriculture this week:
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Committee Members. Thank you for the opportunity to be here today.
On April 23, I will begin my 26th year in the grain industry. Over half of those years were spent in Winnipeg. I was fortunate to have the Hon. Otto Lang as a direct superior for four of those years while at Pioneer Grain, and worked with the Hon. Charlie Mayer the last time barley was being contemplated for the open market.
Today, I own a commodities and communications business with farmers and industry as clients. My daily newsletter is distributed to over 6,000 farmers, and I speak 40 to 50 times a year to agriculture-related audiences.
While parts of my Winnipeg years were spent shaping agricultural policy, today, I get to witness the effects of policy in the agriculture industry.
Adam Smith, in his book "The Wealth of Nations," first published in (1776), described free trade as "the obvious and simple system of natural liberty in which individuals are free to pursue their own interests, while governments provide the legal framework inwhich commerce takes place."
I would challenge anyone to find an industry more regulated than agriculture.
I will utilize my time today on risk management because in the rush to regulate agriculture, managing the day-to-day risks involved in farming has been a forgotten entity.
In previous APF discussions, business risk management was categorized as a suite of income stabilization, production insurance, disaster assistance and a cash advance program.
The underlying theme has been the same for the past 20 years. Top-down management isn't the best route toward discovery and innovation, and it is time that the bottom-up approach is considered.
We in this room fall into the trap that we know what is best for farmers.
We don't.
Farmers know what is best for their operation, and farms today have become so diverse that blanket policies and framework are ineffective.
If you question that statement, I challenge you to look at the CAIS results.
We have created a system whereby farmers are risk takers, and when the actual risk is realized either through forces of weather or through the vagaries of supply and demand, government is looked upon to supplement the shortfall.
One of the most common statements I hear from the farm is that
"governments created this mess that we operate within, they can bail us out."
The current system has the farmer more important to the industry of accountants,chemical and seed providers than he is to the base industry of supplying a continuous base for value adding, and a lessening cultural base on which to build the principles of a healthy society.
I would suggest that it is time to ask the question:
How did we ever get here?
Agriculture has lost its way.
We are here today because we have not fostered innovation. We have allowed farmers to become risk takers with government the risk manager.
A farmer shelling out $135 to $200 an acre on inputs and then hoping everything works out is a recipe for disaster. The educational component to managing farm risk has been a forgotten entity.
Uncertainty in prices, yields, government policies and foreign markets means that risk management must play an important role in many farm business decisions; however, for the majority of farmers, it doesn't.
There are a number of risk management tools available, including crop insurance, futures and options, forward contracting sales and purchases, and today, you can even buy weather insurance to mitigate weather anomalies on farmland.
Farmers must become risk managers rather than risk takers.
Let's start with crop insurance. How can you manage input costs risk when you cannot buy insurance to offset what you have spent? Name me one other industry where that is not possible.
Your house is insured for the appraised value or replacement cost. You can buy business interruption insurance; however, you cannot insure the full cost of grain production.
Canada's new APF must take into account the rising costs of farm inputs and allow farmers to insure their costs -- all of them -- not just 60 to 75 percent.
Price is one of many risks that today's farmers face when developing an effective risk management strategy. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada have developed "Managing Market Risk" a self-study publication that examines the key fundamentals of price risk management tools. Futures, options, basis, hedging principles, exchange rate risk,and contracts are the main focus areas.
It was a good first step.
The educational component to risk management for farmers has been a half-hearted attempt by government over the past 15 years.
Allowing farmers to manage risk should be the cornerstone of a new APF. I was once asked by a government employee how much money I thought farmers left on the table because of poor marketing habits. My answer was: it is incalculable.
Education can and will mitigate some risk.
The Canadian Wheat Board's pricing options is an example of a risk management tool that is being underutilized by farmers. Many farmers don't understand them. Providing tools without the underlying education to understand them is akin to giving all of us a scalpel and asking us to perform surgery.
In the early 1990s, a concentrated effort was made to teach farmers the benefits of futures and options through a program initiated with the Western Diversification Fund.
It was a success; however, the educational component to risk management should not be a one-year, one-hit wonder.
Empowering farmers can result in a system that satisfies nearly everyone and promotes cooperation instead of polarization.
And we have a polarized industry.
We created it.
Politicians nurture it to the benefit of their ideological values, and it doesn't matter what side of the house that you sit on. I watch way too much CPAC to think otherwise.
There are two other areas I would like to mention during my allotted time.
The emerging renewable fuels industry in Canada will change the face of farming and could radically change the face of industry as we move from being export reliant to having 18 to 20 percent of the grain we normally export used here at home domestically for fuel. Farmer ownership within the biofuel industry is key to sustaining agriculture at the farm level in Canada.
Without policy to enhance farmer ownership,farmers will be again providing raw product and exporting our wealth.
If you need a blueprint for success, I suggest you look south.
The United States has proposed a 2007 Farm Bill that will help more young people break into the farming business.
In North America, it has been extremely difficult for young people to enter into farming. The health of an industry can be measured by the average age of the participants in that industry, and today, if we were only using that measure, it would show that we have a very unhealthy industry.
Let youth be your guiding principle when developing a new APF. They are our future, and for many farmers wishing to retire during the next five to 10 years, it is their future as well.
If the new APF addresses risk management in a sense that it all starts with the farm and ends with the farm, government will have made a major leap to future success.
We have forgotten our agricultural roots and lost our way, but it is never too late to change direction, not only to the benefit of farmers, but to the benefit of all Canadians.
Thank you for your attention, and I look forward to any questions.
Larry Weber can be reached at: larry@webercommodities.com
UNQUOTE
PS
That's a remarkably clear vision and we are very fortunate to have people working in agriculture who are interested enough to provide leadership.
I copied it,without permission so I may get sued.
Share your vision.
Parsley
Young people need a vision, and hope.
Who gives our youth a good feeling about farming? Whose vision do they look at and say, "Oh boy, that's where I'm headed. What a future!"
Most of the time it is about tightening up and tickering on the same old, same old.
Few have even mentioned YOUTH.
One particular presentation did and it's worth repeating:
QUOTE:
Politics of Grain:Canadian Agriculture Policy Framework (APF)
I presented the following remarks to Canada's Standing Committee on Agriculture this week:
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Committee Members. Thank you for the opportunity to be here today.
On April 23, I will begin my 26th year in the grain industry. Over half of those years were spent in Winnipeg. I was fortunate to have the Hon. Otto Lang as a direct superior for four of those years while at Pioneer Grain, and worked with the Hon. Charlie Mayer the last time barley was being contemplated for the open market.
Today, I own a commodities and communications business with farmers and industry as clients. My daily newsletter is distributed to over 6,000 farmers, and I speak 40 to 50 times a year to agriculture-related audiences.
While parts of my Winnipeg years were spent shaping agricultural policy, today, I get to witness the effects of policy in the agriculture industry.
Adam Smith, in his book "The Wealth of Nations," first published in (1776), described free trade as "the obvious and simple system of natural liberty in which individuals are free to pursue their own interests, while governments provide the legal framework inwhich commerce takes place."
I would challenge anyone to find an industry more regulated than agriculture.
I will utilize my time today on risk management because in the rush to regulate agriculture, managing the day-to-day risks involved in farming has been a forgotten entity.
In previous APF discussions, business risk management was categorized as a suite of income stabilization, production insurance, disaster assistance and a cash advance program.
The underlying theme has been the same for the past 20 years. Top-down management isn't the best route toward discovery and innovation, and it is time that the bottom-up approach is considered.
We in this room fall into the trap that we know what is best for farmers.
We don't.
Farmers know what is best for their operation, and farms today have become so diverse that blanket policies and framework are ineffective.
If you question that statement, I challenge you to look at the CAIS results.
We have created a system whereby farmers are risk takers, and when the actual risk is realized either through forces of weather or through the vagaries of supply and demand, government is looked upon to supplement the shortfall.
One of the most common statements I hear from the farm is that
"governments created this mess that we operate within, they can bail us out."
The current system has the farmer more important to the industry of accountants,chemical and seed providers than he is to the base industry of supplying a continuous base for value adding, and a lessening cultural base on which to build the principles of a healthy society.
I would suggest that it is time to ask the question:
How did we ever get here?
Agriculture has lost its way.
We are here today because we have not fostered innovation. We have allowed farmers to become risk takers with government the risk manager.
A farmer shelling out $135 to $200 an acre on inputs and then hoping everything works out is a recipe for disaster. The educational component to managing farm risk has been a forgotten entity.
Uncertainty in prices, yields, government policies and foreign markets means that risk management must play an important role in many farm business decisions; however, for the majority of farmers, it doesn't.
There are a number of risk management tools available, including crop insurance, futures and options, forward contracting sales and purchases, and today, you can even buy weather insurance to mitigate weather anomalies on farmland.
Farmers must become risk managers rather than risk takers.
Let's start with crop insurance. How can you manage input costs risk when you cannot buy insurance to offset what you have spent? Name me one other industry where that is not possible.
Your house is insured for the appraised value or replacement cost. You can buy business interruption insurance; however, you cannot insure the full cost of grain production.
Canada's new APF must take into account the rising costs of farm inputs and allow farmers to insure their costs -- all of them -- not just 60 to 75 percent.
Price is one of many risks that today's farmers face when developing an effective risk management strategy. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada have developed "Managing Market Risk" a self-study publication that examines the key fundamentals of price risk management tools. Futures, options, basis, hedging principles, exchange rate risk,and contracts are the main focus areas.
It was a good first step.
The educational component to risk management for farmers has been a half-hearted attempt by government over the past 15 years.
Allowing farmers to manage risk should be the cornerstone of a new APF. I was once asked by a government employee how much money I thought farmers left on the table because of poor marketing habits. My answer was: it is incalculable.
Education can and will mitigate some risk.
The Canadian Wheat Board's pricing options is an example of a risk management tool that is being underutilized by farmers. Many farmers don't understand them. Providing tools without the underlying education to understand them is akin to giving all of us a scalpel and asking us to perform surgery.
In the early 1990s, a concentrated effort was made to teach farmers the benefits of futures and options through a program initiated with the Western Diversification Fund.
It was a success; however, the educational component to risk management should not be a one-year, one-hit wonder.
Empowering farmers can result in a system that satisfies nearly everyone and promotes cooperation instead of polarization.
And we have a polarized industry.
We created it.
Politicians nurture it to the benefit of their ideological values, and it doesn't matter what side of the house that you sit on. I watch way too much CPAC to think otherwise.
There are two other areas I would like to mention during my allotted time.
The emerging renewable fuels industry in Canada will change the face of farming and could radically change the face of industry as we move from being export reliant to having 18 to 20 percent of the grain we normally export used here at home domestically for fuel. Farmer ownership within the biofuel industry is key to sustaining agriculture at the farm level in Canada.
Without policy to enhance farmer ownership,farmers will be again providing raw product and exporting our wealth.
If you need a blueprint for success, I suggest you look south.
The United States has proposed a 2007 Farm Bill that will help more young people break into the farming business.
In North America, it has been extremely difficult for young people to enter into farming. The health of an industry can be measured by the average age of the participants in that industry, and today, if we were only using that measure, it would show that we have a very unhealthy industry.
Let youth be your guiding principle when developing a new APF. They are our future, and for many farmers wishing to retire during the next five to 10 years, it is their future as well.
If the new APF addresses risk management in a sense that it all starts with the farm and ends with the farm, government will have made a major leap to future success.
We have forgotten our agricultural roots and lost our way, but it is never too late to change direction, not only to the benefit of farmers, but to the benefit of all Canadians.
Thank you for your attention, and I look forward to any questions.
Larry Weber can be reached at: larry@webercommodities.com
UNQUOTE
PS
That's a remarkably clear vision and we are very fortunate to have people working in agriculture who are interested enough to provide leadership.
I copied it,without permission so I may get sued.
Share your vision.
Parsley
Comment