Survival for farmers and grain companies in today's world demands that we reduce our costs per unit of production or throughput. Since farmers have no one to pass additional costs on to, and the Feds appear more interested in saving Bombardier and the fishermen in Atlantic Canada, we simply have no choice but to be as innovative as possible in driving down our costs per tonne.
If grain companies operating margins are too high, their bottom line will suffer in relation to their competition, and their long term survival becomes questionable as their share prices fall.
This is what occurs in the real world of competition.
Now lets look at what goes on in the monopoly world of the CWB.
Using information from the last 5 annual reports of the CWB, we see their administrative and operating costs dramatically escalating.
From 1996 to 2000, their admin costs have gone up from $41.4 mln to $63.8 mln, and increase of 54%. Total operating costs in the same period have gone up from $149.2 mln to $181.2 mln., an increase of 21%.
If we wish to look at this on a per tonne basis, admin costs have gone up 44% per tonne over the past 5 years, while operating costs have gone up 14% per tonne.
Wouldn't it be nice to farm in this type of world where you simply pass on all your costs, no matter how fast they are increasing?
If grain companies operating margins are too high, their bottom line will suffer in relation to their competition, and their long term survival becomes questionable as their share prices fall.
This is what occurs in the real world of competition.
Now lets look at what goes on in the monopoly world of the CWB.
Using information from the last 5 annual reports of the CWB, we see their administrative and operating costs dramatically escalating.
From 1996 to 2000, their admin costs have gone up from $41.4 mln to $63.8 mln, and increase of 54%. Total operating costs in the same period have gone up from $149.2 mln to $181.2 mln., an increase of 21%.
If we wish to look at this on a per tonne basis, admin costs have gone up 44% per tonne over the past 5 years, while operating costs have gone up 14% per tonne.
Wouldn't it be nice to farm in this type of world where you simply pass on all your costs, no matter how fast they are increasing?
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