Friday, May 11, 2012

Canadians missing innovation opportunities


 


Martin Gooch of the George Morris Centre says Canadian agriculture is missing opportunities to make significant gains from innovation because of the way government policies and industry attitudes are shaped.

In his most recent publication about value chain management, Gooch says government policies are too narrowly focused on farmers. It would be better to encourage supply-chain co-operation and innovation, he says.

Most food-processing companies are still managing their affairs as individual, competitive businesses rather than seeking ways to improve relationships with suppliers and customers so they can partner to find ways to better satisfy consumers, reduce costs, improve efficiencies and improve quality and cut waste.

For example, Gooch says the federal-provincial five-year Growing Forward package of programs puts its focus squarely on farmers and their lobbying for “simple, responsive, predictable and bankable” support programs.

That says nothing about encouraging value chain management.

Gooch says the food industry is lagging behind the information technology (IT) and automotive sectors where supply chain and value chain management have brought huge gains.

Gooch says that when Canadian politicians’ investment in innovation for agriculture is “heavily biased toward science and development” and there is “comparatively little” spent on “enabling and motivating organizational innovation.”

Gooch’s report is posted on the George Morris Centre website at www.valuechains.ca/documents .