
"NOW OPEN TO SERVE YOU"
Michael Chong, M.P.
Wellington-Halton Hills
Toll Free: (866) 878 5556
Email: Chong.M@parl.gc.ca
http://www.mikechong.ca/
Agriculture - Supply Management
Part 3 of 3
September 2005
Ottawa - The
previous two columns pointed out that Canadian farmers are currently
making one fourth the income they made 30 years ago, and that with
the exception of certain sectors like supply management, Canadian
agriculture is in serious trouble. We also pointed out the causes
for this severe drop in income. Here we will focus on some possible
solutions.
First, farm groups and
associations have got to merge, in order to provide one powerful
voice for Canadian agriculture. There are only 230,000 farms left
in Canada, and yet the farming industry is represented by a myriad
of different groups and associations, often contradicting each
other.
Second, governments need to
implement a "Made in Canada" branding strategy for Canadian food
products. Canadian food products in stores should be clearly
labelled so consumers can make an informed choice.
Third, governments need to encourage greater secondary and tertiary
production of food products in Canada. The recent beef border
closure highlighted what risks there are in moving food processing
outside of the country.
Fourth, and most importantly, governments need to address the
fundamental problem in Canadian agriculture: low farm incomes.
Ultimately, the solution to low farm incomes is not going to come
from greater efficiencies and lower input costs, but from higher
revenue. That higher revenue must come from somewhere, whether that
be from governments or consumers. This can be accomplished by
reducing subsidies abroad, by increasing subsidies domestically, or
by restricting imports by imposing tariffs. Ultimately, any
solution involves paying a little more for food.
Let me address one question
many bring up at this point: If other countries produce cheaper
food, why not simply import? Why even produce our own food?
My response is very simple. No
country, no civilization has survived long without the ability to
produce its own food. History has shown that a society's ability to
survive is linked to the security and certainty of its food supply.
This food supply is at too great a risk of disruption - from trade
wars and other threats - if we rely exclusively on imports.
Obviously, certain food stuffs, like oranges, and bananas, cannot be
grown here, or only grown here marginally, and will always need to
be imported. But basic foodstuffs that can be grown here should be
grown here.
We protect our airlines, our
cable companies, our telephone companies, our newspapers, our
healthcare and our cultural sector. These are all protected because
they are considered essential to our national interest. What is more
vital to our national interest than food? Food and shelter are more
fundamental than anything else.
Most
importantly, a healthy democracy and a good society require a
vibrant agricultural sector. Farming is what settled this country,
carving out of the wilderness small towns and townships, counties
and cities, building the society we have today. The essential
nature of farming is something the French understand, embodied in
their word "terroir", translated as our word "earth", but
something richer in meaning. It is something that was once put to
me by a local farmer who talked about "good ground". It was best
put by one of the intellectual forces behind democracy on this
continent who said in 1785, "Cultivators of the earth are the most
valuable citizens. They are the most vigorous, the most independent,
the most virtuous, and they are tied to their country and wedded to
its liberty and interests by the most lasting bonds."