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The Rural Voice, 1991-03, Page 54PERTH Matt Crowley, President, R. R. 1, Gadshill NOK 1J0 393-5716 PCFA Office 229-6430 * The Rural Voice is provided to farmers in Perth County by the PCFA County Federation of Agriculture NEWSLETTER PERSPECTIVES ON MARKETING "Farm locally, and think globally," was the motto for the recent OFA annual convention. A global approach will require change and reorganization in the agricultural industry. There are few other choices. Present provincial and federal government ad-hoc relief pro- grams may keep farmers solvent in the short term, but do not address the prob- lems of overproduction and artificially low prices, the latter brought about by U.S./E.E.C. trade wars. We need long- term policies. I urge the members of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture, and all the commodity boards, to take a good look at the realities of a global market, and try to organize for it. Farmers do a very good job of pro- ducing, but the marketing (export and domestic) is left primarily to the com- modity boards, processors, and govern- ment. Why do we need government involvement for exporting? There are many reasons, but among the most important is the very high cost of initiat- ing international trade arrangements; moral support is not enough. Individually, federal and provincial governments sponsor missions to ex- port markets whenever we have a sur- plus domestically. Rather than being a co-ordinated national approach, it re- sembles a disposal operation. Where do we go from here? Some say that we can't compete in the big leagues. I say, "not so!" You don't have to be big, rather, you have to work at it harder. Some of the smallest countries in the world achieved prosperity, not because they were big, but because they were willing to change, and they found they could compete, with high quality prod- ucts. Now is the time for co-operation between organizations, commodity boards, processors, and governments, to devise a better system of agricultural trade. Such a system must provide market information and facilitate the exposure of Canadian products in the 48 THE RURAL VOICE international arena. The system, or organization, must co-ordinate its ap- proach with our trade negotiators in various countries. The organization could also act as a selling mechanism. The "Canagrex" approach was similar but was defeated because some people thought that there was too much govern- ment involvement. Some competing countries in Asia and Europe, however, deal strictly at a government level. We have to have a better system to confront problems, and ensure the stability and profitability of agriculture. To quote Dr. Gordon Bowman, "The world is not waiting for us. P.S.: "Canada Pork International" could be a model for all commodities.0 by Willy Keller active member of the PCFA GLEANINGS The January 24 meeting of the PCFA was addressed by Steven Langdon, NDP MP for Windsor -Essex. Langdon first clarified his party's position concerning the Middle East conflict. In a nutshell, the NDP wanted sanctions to be given more time to work. Historical examples of 2 - 3 years being needed were cited. Now that the war is reality, the party wants Canada to assume humanitarian activities rather than an offensive role. After the war, many new problems will have to be dealt with, including those created by war. Canada must play an active role in solving them, according to Langdon. Langdon's main discussion topic was agriculture. It would be easy for a politician to seize a photo opportunity, crack a broad smile for the pensive farm audience, and say everything will work itself out in agriculture. Langdon was more honest than that, and deserves respect for grappling with tough issues alongside farm people. Regional demo- graphics play an enormous role in ham - All members of PCFA are encouraged to submit their views for the newsletter. Get involved. pering development of a unified agricul- tural policy. Even in the southwestern Ontario farm belt, farmers cite ex- tremely diverse concerns and issues which they feel should be prioritized in any policies. Local weather patterns, local de- pendencies on certain crops, proximity to urban encroachment, and vulnerabil- ity to environmental problems, keep farmers busy "putting out fires" on the home front, sometimes at the expense of recognizing the overall problems facing agriculture. Looking towards setting an agricultural agenda at the national level becomes increasingly difficult as sup- port for each policy initiative is splin- tered. Difficulties are only compounded by the world situation. Obviously, there are no simple solutions, and we're likely to hear of the same problems, like a broken record, for some time to come.0 John Drummond PCFA monthly meetings are usually held on the fourth Thursday of the month. Contact the office at 229-6430 for the exact date and time if you are interested in attending. 1