Sandhusker said:
but the same just doesn't seem to apply to China. Come in, Bill, you've got a contradiction to explain.
Primarily because them 1 billion Chinese don't have the income of a single broken down cowboy
Really though, I'm not completely sure why these free trade agreement discussions need to turn into open warfare. Both countries are guilty of unfair subsidies in a variety of markets, both real and IMAGINED. I agree we need to level the playing field EVERYWHERE for free trade to work properly. We need your P&SA. You need our M_ID. The list goes on.
Seriously though, if the EU could overcome their differences and open up free trade, and even a common currency, surely the US and Canada could do the same? Ideologically, our two countries are very similar. Hell, I got more in common with OT (gasp) than I do with someone living in Toronto.
As long as livestock producers on each side of the border fight one another, the real winners are the big players. While the border was closed, many small packers shut down, eliminating some of the competition down south. And since we had NO true competition up here, our own prices dove down. During the BSE crisis, we exported virtually the same amount of beef into the US as we did before BSE, yet our prices took a 50% slide on some weights of feeders, despite near record low feed prices. Our cull market is still in the toilet, even though many Canadians are eating steaks cut from those very 20 cent culls.
Now, your USDA is playing games with Japan, which is going to hurt your cheap cuts of beef and your cull market (which is, at least partly, what you export to them). Whose going to win this one? The multinationals of course. They have a way to make the money on all this stuff that they're paying pennies for.
Perhaps its time to lay down some hatchets, and actually talk seriously about a TRUE North American beef market. Or at the very least a Can-Am beef market. The only way cattle producers can win is to stick together. Maybe that means an R-Calf Canuck or a CCA (Can-Am Cattlemans Association)? It probably also means that you meet our most stringent beef health standards, while we do the exact same thing.
Something to chew on.
Rod