"The Book" farmers should read for barley marketing information during this time of voting, is a report called:
The Canadian Barley Industry in Transition:
A Study for Alberta Agriculture, Food and Rural Development
April 2004
(Revised)
It's very professional. It avoids any comments laced with political-additives(I don't like beer 'cause my dad....).
www.choicematters.gov.ab.ca/files/pdf/Barley_Study_April_04.pdf
I'll post some content
QUOTE
"On the basis of this research and analysis, there is no configuration or re-working of the CWB and its policies that would provide as much benefit to the Western Canadian barley industry as would either removing the CWB’s monopoly on barley (often referred to as the marketing choice option), or the complete removal of the CWB system from the barley industry.
Even if its pricing regime was changed in order for the CWB to be more marketresponsive, the CWB still brings with it an overhead cost that is unnecessary and marketprice distortions.
The main causes of the CWB’s apparent poor sales performance remain unclear and there is no evidence to suggest that this would change with changes to the CWB system.
The CWB has been shown to be ineffective in the feed barley export market, unable to compete with the dominant domestic feed industry most of the time and in most regions of
Western Canada.
This analysis has shown that CWB feed barley prices to farmers can at
times be as much a function of interest revenue allocation as market prices.
Moreover, net prices received from sales have been shown to be in the low end of market values and below domestic values in most areas much of the time.
UNQUOTE
Parsley
The Canadian Barley Industry in Transition:
A Study for Alberta Agriculture, Food and Rural Development
April 2004
(Revised)
It's very professional. It avoids any comments laced with political-additives(I don't like beer 'cause my dad....).
www.choicematters.gov.ab.ca/files/pdf/Barley_Study_April_04.pdf
I'll post some content
QUOTE
"On the basis of this research and analysis, there is no configuration or re-working of the CWB and its policies that would provide as much benefit to the Western Canadian barley industry as would either removing the CWB’s monopoly on barley (often referred to as the marketing choice option), or the complete removal of the CWB system from the barley industry.
Even if its pricing regime was changed in order for the CWB to be more marketresponsive, the CWB still brings with it an overhead cost that is unnecessary and marketprice distortions.
The main causes of the CWB’s apparent poor sales performance remain unclear and there is no evidence to suggest that this would change with changes to the CWB system.
The CWB has been shown to be ineffective in the feed barley export market, unable to compete with the dominant domestic feed industry most of the time and in most regions of
Western Canada.
This analysis has shown that CWB feed barley prices to farmers can at
times be as much a function of interest revenue allocation as market prices.
Moreover, net prices received from sales have been shown to be in the low end of market values and below domestic values in most areas much of the time.
UNQUOTE
Parsley
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