Friday, June 26, 2015

A proposal to phase out milk supply management

There’s a new proposal for ending supply management for Canada’s dairy industry – a sudden price drop to world levels followed by a temporary premium to compensate farmers.

Martha Hall Findlay, former prominent federal Liberal, and Jack Mintz of the School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary offer the proposal in an opinion piece in the Globe and Mail.

Their plan is similar to one Australia used when it ended supply management.

Hall Findlay, who ran for the federal Liberal leadership, is the only politician with the courage to say supply management is extremely expensive and is not working for Canadians.

In Australia, “compensation and transition payments were funded by maintaining and collecting a small portion of the system’s existing price supports for a limited period of time.

“Some farmers cashed out for a decent retirement; those who stayed in the business became more efficient and more productive,” Hall Findlay and Mintz say.

Saputo Inc. of Montreal recently spent a small fortune to buy a processing company in Australia, rather than investing in Canada, with the intention of exporting to China and other Pacific-rim countries.

Hall-Findlay and Mintz propose an immediate phase-out of import quotas, which would bring the price of milk to the U.S. level.

“A more gradual approach would also delay Canadian farmers’ ability to begin exporting, and allow competitors from Australia, New Zealand and the U.S. to secure and consolidate their export-market shares,” they wrote.


Their plan would end any value for quota, which they estimate at $23 billion at $30,000 per cow.