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Aussie Learned Hard Single-Desk Lesson with Single Desk

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    Aussie Learned Hard Single-Desk Lesson with Single Desk

    This was posted on Commodity marketing by MALLEEFARMER on October 29, 2006 .

    Read it again.


    QUOTE
    THE Cole inquiry into Australia's involvement in the UN's oil-for-food scandal will hand down its findings next month. The revelations that, among other things, the AWB paid $US220 million in kickbacks to Saddam Hussein, have been appalling.
    Recent news reports suggest the final report will be highly critical of many facets of AWB's behaviour and performance. This is hardly surprising, for AWB's behaviour stems from, and is driven by, a culture that reflects its monopoly status. Monopoly always breeds arrogance and inappropriate behaviour. One way to fix this problem is for Canberra to remove the exclusive privilege of the single desk from the wheat board.

    I am a substantial wheat producer on the southwest slopes of NSW, cropping about 4000ha each year, about 60 per cent of it wheat, with the balance barley and canola.

    Last year we produced about 7000 tonnes of wheat and 4000 tonnes of barley. This year, virtually all our crops have been converted to hay or silage, or used for grazing, because of the devastating lack of spring rain, and we will receive minimal grain revenue.

    I am also a non-executive director of GrainCorp Ltd and have had a policy and consulting interest in wheat marketing for more than 30 years. But I write here from the perspective of a wheat producer.

    The arrogance and inappropriate behaviour at the AWB was evident well before it was accused of funneling millions of dollars in kickbacks to the former Iraqi tyrant. Think of AWB's selective duchessing of growers and other supporters. Or its sneering at those who had the temerity to question its actions or omnipotence. There are countless other examples.

    These shortcomings can, and hopefully will, be lessened by changes in corporate governance, personnel and the like. But any improvements are likely to be temporary unless fundamental changes are made to the commercial environment within which the company operates. We only have to recall the saga of the Australian Wool Corp's mishandling of the reserve price scheme, or the $165million losses incurred by the NSW Grains Board, despite its legislated monopoly position over canola and barley, to be reminded that the culture of monopoly is systemic and universal, not personnel-specific.

    So it is vital for the federal Government to recognise that mere tinkering will not be sufficient to put an end to the behaviour that has been revealed at the Cole inquiry.

    As the Government addresses the report, the objective should be to make changes that enhance growers' net returns. Manifestly, the single-desk arrangements do not. Indeed, it is one of the great hoaxes perpetrated on wheat growers that the single desk is able to extract a significant market premium.

    Australia does enjoy premium wheat prices, but these have almost everything to do with intrinsic quality attributes of our wheat and/or with geography in terms of freight rate advantages, not the single desk per se. In fact, recent marketing visits by Graincorp representatives to wheat purchasers overseas (especially in Asia) have confirmed that they are reluctant to put all their eggs in one basket, so to speak.

    Diversifying their supplier base, by definition, means purchasing wheat from another country when Australia operates a single desk. Australia unnecessarily loses market share as a result.

    At the same time, the cost padding and cost shifting that is involved with existing single-desk arrangements is both clear and significant, albeit not appreciated by many wheat producers, because AWB has never been transparent.

    Many studies have documented these costs. The net costs are estimated (conservatively, in my view) at between $6 and $11 a tonne in an average year, or $78million to $143million in total: a transfer from Australian wheat producers to AWB shareholders.

    A particularly egregious example is the way that AWB Ltd books ship chartering profits to itself (hence shareholders), when they should flow through to producers via AWB International. Demurrage costs (net of dispatch surpluses), by contrast, are a charge on the national pool. This practice is outrageous and utterly indefensible. This year, because of the drought, the per-tonne impact of the $65million national pool management fee - a fee structure negotiated between AWB Ltd and AWB International (although the people involved were the same) - will be horrendous, to the point where many producers with wheat to sell will be reluctant to deliver to the national pool. Potentially, on a two million tonne national pool, the management fee may come to $25-$30 a tonne.

    No wonder the conventional wisdom among wheat producers across the country is changing rapidly. The single-desk structure and its management by AWB have been highly deleterious to wheat producers' economic returns.

    Meanwhile, as testimony to the Cole inquiry has demonstrated, the effectiveness of the supervisory body, the Wheat Export Authority, has been lamentable.

    As a wheat producer facing increasingly competitive world markets, an exchange-rate squeeze resulting from Australia's mineral and resources exports success, not to mention the vagaries of Australia's climate, I cannot afford to be captive to a high-cost monopoly marketing organisation whose principal obligations are owed to its shareholders, not wheat producers. If my enterprise is to remain viable, I must have the choice to shop around for marketing options and operators who will offer me the best net returns, as is taken for granted in every other part of the economy. While these separate organisations are also seeking to maximise their profits, they have to compete to attract my business and so have to offer the best net prices (gross prices at the lowest cost), which is not the way a monopolistic AWB operates.

    So how should Canberra respond to the Cole inquiry? A good start would be to remove the exclusive privilege of the single desk (its effective veto over bulk exports) from AWB, starting with the 2007 harvest at the latest. Other recommendations: transfer the management of a contestable single desk to a genuinely independent and effective WEA; allow other marketers to enter the export market (perhaps on a graduated basis); and encourage the establishment of a standards-setting and quality assurance agency that will certify the premium standards that Australia's wheat producers rightly expect.

    In short, competition will herald an end to bad cultural practices at AWB and lead to higher returns for grain growers. UNQUOTE


    Lest we forget.

    Parsley

    #2
    I believe a lot of aussies learned a hard lesson in the canola market this year as well.

    Comment


      #3
      Some people drink deeply from the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle." - Grant M. Bright

      Comment


        #4
        You must be thirsty Parsley.

        Comment


          #5
          "Some people have to constantly use the quotes of other people because they cant think of anything to say for themselves"-cottonpickin

          Comment


            #6
            I am a little slow-witted, but I try hard to improve by reading and sourcing. Gotta' work with what ya' got!

            Parsley

            Comment


              #7
              CP
              "Wisdom is learning and respecting other peoples experiences, Arrogance is ignoring wisdom."

              Comment


                #8
                Currently there is a govt funded review committee travelling across aust looking for farmer feedback on what to do with wheat marketing here in Aust.
                Our peak farm body in South Aust has reccomended full deregulation after a phase in period of 3 years.
                I believe the Victorians have also suggested change, opion is gradually swinging towards change.

                The whole of the aust whaet market was basically deregulated because of drought last harvest and all the single desk supporters for some reason forgot to pool there wheat and took the higher $90 per tonne drought premium in the cash market.......

                Comment


                  #9
                  MALLEEFARMER,

                  Suitcases of cash was being moved throughout the world from all the grain that went through the Food for Oil program.

                  Did quite a few of the top AWB get off the hook, or were you satisfied with the prosecutions record?

                  FYI...

                  http://www.buseco.monash.edu.au/mgt/research/governance/pdf-downloads/g-acquaah-wshop.pdf


                  Parsley

                  Comment


                    #10
                    They are yet to face there day in court but it seems out of the 12 named originlly it seems at least 9 will face some sort of court action

                    Comment


                      #11
                      malleefarmer,

                      A woman by the name of Claudia Rossett has really done a lot of work on Food for Oil. Her yesterday's article shows she is still following Canada's Maurice Strong.
                      She says:

                      From Oil for Food to the latest scandals involving U.N. funding in North Korea, Maurice Strong appears as a shadowy and often critically important figure.


                      Really interesting reading about Canada's Maurice Strong on:
                      http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,250789,00.html

                      Did some of your AWB officials come over to Canada?

                      Parsley

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Parsley can you summerise on one page what that was all about?? Please.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          kamichael

                          Here is the "CWB connection" sworn out in the AU inquiry, and reported in the media:

                          "Dropping the bundle

                          Page 1 of 3 | Single page

                          Australia might have nipped the Iraq wheat scandal in the bud if it had chosen to look
                          more closely at what was not being said, writes David Marr.

                          THIS is bullshit," said the man from AWB and that was good enough for the
                          Government.

                          In late January 2000, Canberra was moving in a leisurely way to deal with allegations
                          coming from deep within the United Nations that the national wheat trader AWB was
                          sanctions busting.

                          Disbelief greeted the charge when it reached Bob Bowker, head of the Department of
                          Foreign Affairs and Trade's Middle East branch, in the middle of the month. He reassured
                          Australian diplomats in New York: "We think it unlikely that AWB would be involved
                          knowingly in any form of payment in breach of the sanctions regime."

                          Why was he so certain? Because the month before, AWB had assured him it was "fully
                          aware of, and respected, Australian Government obligations and UN Security Council
                          sensitivities and would act accordingly".

                          We know now - and AWB executives knew then - that this was a lie. At this time, AWB
                          was paying its first corrupt "trucking fees" to Iraq. The system that would eventually yield
                          Saddam Hussein's regime a fortune in bribes and kickbacks was in its very early days.
                          What follows is the story of Australia's failure to nip the whole system in the bud.

                          What Canberra had learnt by cable from its UN mission was that Iraq was pressuring a
                          "third country" - easily identified as Canada - to make payments "outside the oil-for-food
                          program". Iraq was claiming these payments were already being made by AWB.

                          It was absolutely true.

                          Her message to Canberra was that once AWB gave the UN a copy of its "standard terms
                          and conditions", the crisis would pass.

                          […]

                          AWB had a more nuanced understanding: Canada had also to be squared away. In the
                          days after the Washington meeting, McConville and Flugge flew north to meet Canadian
                          Wheat Board officials over breakfast in Winnipeg, and executives of the Saskatchewan
                          Wheat Pool at a transit hotel at Vancouver Airport.

                          Though a haze of amnesia descended on these men when they appeared before the
                          Cole inquiry, it's clear they were mounting a big effort to ingratiate the AWB with the
                          Canadians, who had an immediate problem: as part of its effort to force them to pay
                          "trucking fees", Iraq was refusing to unload Canadian ships.

                          Australia was there to help. Snowball jotted a note in his diary: "Trevor wants to keepAustralia was there to help. Snowball jotted a note in his diary: "Trevor wants to keep
                          alongside them - see if we could help them … mkts to put the cargoes into."

                          What happened there is unknown, but it is clear that Canada, which had been pursuing
                          its complaints against Australia fairly vigorously, let them drop...

                          Over the following year,
                          Canada was to send a further 300,000 tonnes of wheat to Iraq through an "accredited
                          exporter". None of those ships would have been landed without paying "trucking fees".
                          […]
                          Cole will have to decide if this was an appalling oversight, a brilliant snow job or a superb
                          bureaucratic operation in defence of an iconic Australian corporation. The result was the
                          same: AWB would pay almost $300 million in bribes to Saddam."

                          Check this thread out: Is the CWB Guilty of "Dropping the Bundle"?
                          It will explain many of the connections!

                          http://www.agri-ville.com/cgi-bin/forums/viewThread.cgi?1164392433

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Tom4CWB,

                            Your link back to agri-ville,

                            http://www.agri-ville.com/cgi-bin/forums/viewThread.cgi?1164392433


                            should be required reading for every farmer logging on to commodity marketing.

                            If Farmers don't look after their money, someone else will do it for them.

                            Parsley

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Corruption might occur in Australia or in the private sector but it would never happen at the Canadian wheat board because:1.human beings are completely different when working for the govt.Altruistic,loving,pure and 2.The access to information has never covered the cwb.AWB was covered by ATI laws and now this.

                              It is public scrutiny that actually causes corruption because OUR board has never been subject to any and theres never been any bribes kickbacks or scandle there.

                              Comment

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