Or is he???
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Does the CWB understand grain markets?
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In France, from 1792-1794, the guillotine was used 100 times per day by a professional executioner called a BOURREAUX.
His job was to chop off heads.
Does the CWB have a secret tribe of borreaux travelling the West chopping off marketing choice opportunities? Lying, half-truths, deception, slyness, hidden facts, stilted charts, doctored figures?
Chop. Chop. Chop.
If they do, marketing choice farmers, in one way or another, will be paying for the Board borreaux.
Parsley
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In France, from 1792-1794, the guillotine was used 100 times per day by a professional executioner called a BOURREAUX.
His job was to chop off heads.
Does the CWB have a secret tribe of borreaux travelling the West chopping off marketing choice opportunities with lying, half-truths, deception, slyness, hidden facts, stilted charts, doctored figures?
Chop. Chop. Chop.
If the CWB does, marketing choice farmers, in one way or another, will be paying for the Board borreaux.
Parsley
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Off topic but interestingly the CWB posted responses to 2 of the 3 papers today.
http://www.cwb.ca/en/hot/producer/pdf/penner.pdf
http://www.cwb.ca/en/hot/producer/pdf/cooper.pdf
Always intersting when a response takes more space than the original article. Perhaps meant to be warm and fluffy like a down quilt on a winters afternoon where you can sleep knowing the rest of the world is passing you by and you are in no danger.
For those of you who are sitting on the fence, read and decide.
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Doesn't relate the thread theme but perhaps to the title.
I note the CWB holds the barley producer pricing options as their answer to a new world.
If the CWB is confident in their pricing options, why are the FPC contracts (and from there basis levels) so poor relative to the PRO. $23.48/tonne under for both 2 row and 6 row?
Why is the basis so ugly on feed barley (what amounts to $40/tonne under delivered Saskatoon area)? If you can vote to retain barley in the CWB, I suggest you sign up on this contract. You can deliver feed barley at $40 under and allow the CWB to turn around/deliver against futures in the range of $15 to $20 under with an additional $20/tonne being added into pool returns.
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Here's my favourite from the CWB Penner response.
<blockquote>"...and ignores a large body of work by independent academics that concludes farmers receive higher returns through the CWB."</blockquote>
How on earth can they keep claiming that the studies bought and paid for by the CWB are 'independent'.
These folks must have their own secret dictionary that no one else can check to go along with the secret databases used in their studies.
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Heres the one I like from the rebuttal:
"14. Spot prices by their very nature will be higher than the overall pooled price which is an average of the high and low prices grain has been sold for over the course of the crop year."
If spot prices are always going to be higher than pooled returns, why do we want pooled returns?
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