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The Rural Voice, 1985-09, Page 15dustry, no matter what their dreams are, should postpone entry for now. "1t is better to discourage a•son from working with Dad at this time than getting them both into trouble," says Brinkman. • Change our attitudes to the measure of success so that survival is a measure of success "and not whether you have a new tractor out front." • Farmers may have to be willing to pay taxes instead of buying new equipment, etc. in order to avoid pay- ing taxes at all costs. • A willingness to look for non-farm employment to supplement the farm income is needed. Finally, Brinkman recommends that financially troubled farmers "leave agriculture before all their equity is lost." As difficult a decision as that would be, leaving before the bailiff comes means "there's some chance they can come back into the industry at a later date." cer 0 ed Brinkman's message is sobering; parity may not be the solution that will bring prosperity back to rural Ontario. Maybe the realistic response is that farmers just have to keep pull- ing their wagons into a circle and making some tough personal manage- ment decisions. One thing everyone agrees on: there are more tough times ahead for agriculture. Parity has yet to prove itself as the much needed, even desperately needed, "quick fix." Ontario's top yielding winter wheat farr /IL\ 1036a/eveyid-filar fklertorL ! !i4 bufact'Q I tlld(iChhat�f�iam SEPTEMBER 1985 13