Here's some news from down under, courtesy of agnewsonline.com:
"Embattled wheat export monopoly AWB faces the loss of up to three-quarters of the export pool it needs to guarantee returns to growers after east coast handler GrainCorp submitted an application to export 230,000 tonnes next year.
Wheat Australia...has also applied to export 500,000 tonnes of wheat... while CBH has re-submitted its application to export 2 million tonnes of wheat.....
According to the Wheat Export Authority, six companies have applied to export wheat since Prime Minister John Howard transferred the veto over the applications from AWB to the federal Agriculture Minister, Peter McGauran, last week.....
GrainCorp managing director Tom Keene said the company was offering $15 per tonne above AWB's estimated pool return. CBH is offering $10 to $20 per tonne above it......
Mr Keene said GrainCorp could offer the higher price "because our costs of marketing services are a lot lower than AWB's. We have also transparently informed the marketplace of what our costs are, which is 1.75 per cent, and we don't have the overhang of that fixed fee that AWB enjoys".....
Mr Keene said that GrainCorp was demonstrating "the benefits that can be delivered through having contestable marketing services, and those contestable marketing services substantially reduce costs, and those costs flow straight back to growers".
A 2003 Senate inquiry found there were 77 uncontested services in handling, storage and transport at issue between AWBL and AWBI, with profit margin built into each. The Kronos Report estimates freeing up the farm gate to port chain would save growers $100 million.
"We believe competition takes costs out of the system, just as it has in the grain industry generally," Mr Keene said. "It is only the wheat industry which has retained those costs.""
More solid evidence that the single desk does little except inflate costs. But judging by the non-existent commentary on this issue by the Canadian mainstream media and Comrade Ritter, you'd think that Australia was on another planet.
"Embattled wheat export monopoly AWB faces the loss of up to three-quarters of the export pool it needs to guarantee returns to growers after east coast handler GrainCorp submitted an application to export 230,000 tonnes next year.
Wheat Australia...has also applied to export 500,000 tonnes of wheat... while CBH has re-submitted its application to export 2 million tonnes of wheat.....
According to the Wheat Export Authority, six companies have applied to export wheat since Prime Minister John Howard transferred the veto over the applications from AWB to the federal Agriculture Minister, Peter McGauran, last week.....
GrainCorp managing director Tom Keene said the company was offering $15 per tonne above AWB's estimated pool return. CBH is offering $10 to $20 per tonne above it......
Mr Keene said GrainCorp could offer the higher price "because our costs of marketing services are a lot lower than AWB's. We have also transparently informed the marketplace of what our costs are, which is 1.75 per cent, and we don't have the overhang of that fixed fee that AWB enjoys".....
Mr Keene said that GrainCorp was demonstrating "the benefits that can be delivered through having contestable marketing services, and those contestable marketing services substantially reduce costs, and those costs flow straight back to growers".
A 2003 Senate inquiry found there were 77 uncontested services in handling, storage and transport at issue between AWBL and AWBI, with profit margin built into each. The Kronos Report estimates freeing up the farm gate to port chain would save growers $100 million.
"We believe competition takes costs out of the system, just as it has in the grain industry generally," Mr Keene said. "It is only the wheat industry which has retained those costs.""
More solid evidence that the single desk does little except inflate costs. But judging by the non-existent commentary on this issue by the Canadian mainstream media and Comrade Ritter, you'd think that Australia was on another planet.
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