Barley premiums
Kyle Korneychuk presents some misguided ideas about the Canadian Wheat Board in his letter to the editor March 13. He suggests that "one seller can command a higher price than multiple sellers."
In theory, perhaps. In the reality of the current CWB, absolutely not.
Mr. Korneychuk and the other CWB directors have a responsibility to look at all the facts, not just the flawed economic analyses that they pay for.
And the facts speak loud and clear. The CWB does not get premiums in barley.
Richard Gray of the University of Saskatchewan is one of the authors of a study commissioned by the CWB that concluded the CWB gets $59 million a year more than an open market system would.
He admitted to me in a conversation that the CWB does not get premiums in feed barley. His view is that the CWB earns premiums only in malting barley, described as a premium over feed prices.
On a typical two million tonne malt barley pool, $59 million works out to about $29.50 per tonne, or 64 cents a bushel.
Over the last eight years, the average malt premium over feed in Montana was $1.23 a bu., almost double the premium Gray suggests the CWB gets.
But there's more. The average malt premium in Canada is closer to 46 cents a bu., lower than what Gray gives the CWB credit for.
So Mr. Korneychuk, where is the CWB-induced premium? Using your conclusions, if it weren't for the CWB, malt barley in Canada would be at a discount to feed barley. How absurd is that?
The reality is it appears western Canadian barley farmers would be better off without the CWB.
Clearly Montana farmers are....
- John De Pape,
Winnipeg, Man.
Kyle Korneychuk presents some misguided ideas about the Canadian Wheat Board in his letter to the editor March 13. He suggests that "one seller can command a higher price than multiple sellers."
In theory, perhaps. In the reality of the current CWB, absolutely not.
Mr. Korneychuk and the other CWB directors have a responsibility to look at all the facts, not just the flawed economic analyses that they pay for.
And the facts speak loud and clear. The CWB does not get premiums in barley.
Richard Gray of the University of Saskatchewan is one of the authors of a study commissioned by the CWB that concluded the CWB gets $59 million a year more than an open market system would.
He admitted to me in a conversation that the CWB does not get premiums in feed barley. His view is that the CWB earns premiums only in malting barley, described as a premium over feed prices.
On a typical two million tonne malt barley pool, $59 million works out to about $29.50 per tonne, or 64 cents a bushel.
Over the last eight years, the average malt premium over feed in Montana was $1.23 a bu., almost double the premium Gray suggests the CWB gets.
But there's more. The average malt premium in Canada is closer to 46 cents a bu., lower than what Gray gives the CWB credit for.
So Mr. Korneychuk, where is the CWB-induced premium? Using your conclusions, if it weren't for the CWB, malt barley in Canada would be at a discount to feed barley. How absurd is that?
The reality is it appears western Canadian barley farmers would be better off without the CWB.
Clearly Montana farmers are....
- John De Pape,
Winnipeg, Man.
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