The Rural Voice, 1996-04, Page 12EARLY BOOKING DISCOUNT
ORDER BEFORE APRIL 30
WELLESLEY LOADING CHUTES
CATTLE CHUTES
ROUND BALE FEEDERS
,•-
:rte,
.
- :
LOADING
CHUTE
• Heavy
Construction
• 3 Pt. hitch
(both sides)
• Ramp
settings
26" - 42"
CHUTE
CATTLE
Ilimmil'
Itellilliti, I I
Il
Willillimi; , ,, ,, , 7 , „....t,%is, i?I
• Heavy Duty
• 3 pt hitch (both sides)
• Collapsible for shipping
ROUND BALE FEEDERS
,11M14iliI....EMUM Mak .e
` 1j, `'�1
} +���•�
tI P.r
- a�R: AIR• LfMR
•Tx8'
• Feeds approx. 18 cattle
• Holds 5' x 5' bales (and smaller)
• 1 1/4" tubing
• Heavy duty construction
TILMAN SHERK
R.R. #3
Wellesley, Ontario
519-656-3338
519-656-3429 evenings
8 THE RURAL VOICE
r
Robert Mercer
The budget and more important stuff
The March federal budget was not
too tough on agriculture, though the
Feds did what they said they would
do many years ago — they killed the
dairy subsidy. It will be gone by the
year 2002.
Effective
August 1, 1997
there will be a
five year phase-
out of the
subsidy and by
2002 the S159.6
million will all
be gone. This is
all part of the
NAFTA/GATT
approach to free
trade and the
overall
reduction in
subsidies to
agriculture. The
problem that remains is that in
Canada there will be less subsidy so
the difference will be made up in the
market price of milk and milk
products. On the other hand U.S.
producers get subsidy through the
back door and keep their milk prices
low at the checkout counter. Thus
U.S. prices will not rise as fast as
they do in Canada and the "price
discrepancy" at the retail counter will
appear even greater than it has —
especially for those Canadian cities
on the U.S. border. As the consumer
price difference rises the call for
review of the supply management
program will escalate with shriller
voices and a more determined
consumer advocacy.
The question currently under
review at the NAFTA panel on the
U.S. challenge to our dairy and
poultry tariffs will not be settled once
and for all should Canada win. The
battle will just shift ground from the
legal field to the consumer field. The
first meeting in the preliminary stage
of the challenge was heard on March
12, and the ruling may not be made
now until June '96.
Although there were other areas of
interest to agriculture in the budget
(the sale of the grain hopper fleet)
there was one smart move that
deserves attention. Food inspection
will be combined under a single
agency. The new agency will
oversee the quarantine programs as
well as food inspection and will
combine the activities in this arca
from Agriculture Canada, Health
Canada and Fisheries and Oceans.
This is to me a case of putting
consumers' (read taxpayers')
concerns ahead of bureaucratic
empire building and will thus save
some S40 million of long overdue
government downsizing.
Another item that caught my eye
last month was a headline that said in
part "do not underestimate the
potential for interest rates to fall to
shockingly low levels over the next
few years." As interest rates drive a
significant book entry in farm
accounts I wondered what reasoning
there was for such a bold statement, a
statement that is really of more
concern than the Federal budget.
The article was pointing out that
the North American baby boom of
the late '40s and '50s is winding
down asset accumulation from
houses, cars, furniture and family to
wealth accumulation. Spenders are
becoming savers. By pushing up
demand in the '70s and '80s the baby
boom created double-digit inflation
and double-digit intcrest rates. The
article suggested that what this
demand did to housing and real estate
in the '70s and '80s it is doing to
financial asset prices now. Thus the
currcnt bull market for stocks rather
than houses.
Grey hair is thinking in terms of
retirement and financial ncst eggs,
and the article said that this process
was half way through its cycle. As
money moves away from buying to
storage (bonds, stocks, GIC's) there
is more money available to lend and
less demand to borrow. This means
lower — shockingly lower — interest
rates ahead.°
Robert Mercer is the founding editor
of the Broadwater Market Letter for
which he continues to write market
and ag-politica! commentary.