Thanks.
Thanks, folks, for your presentations.
Willem, on the debt numbers you outlined, George Brinkman, an economist out of Guelph, came out with figures a week before last. The figures indicated that between 1981 and now, really, Canadian farm debt has increased 300%, and U.S. farm debt has increased 20%. Then when you look at the subsidies that actually go to the farmers, the Canadian government has subsidized over that period of time 116% of farm income in Canada. In other words, our share out of the marketplace was negative. In the United States, their government, although they subsidized higher, had a share of farm income of only 37%.
That's the reality of the world we're in, and of where we're at.
Nobody has really mentioned this to any great extent, but should we be looking at basically restructuring the...? I think Randall mentioned that we're looking at BRM in absence of most other things. But should we be looking at a federal government program for support in other areas, like the HACCP program? Farmers are picking up that cost, but it's the consumer that benefits. Inspections fees, farm health and safety, public health and safety--should we be looking at all those areas, which are green under the WTO so are allowable? It gets money into the farm community and it's not a subsidy. I don't know why we don't look at that, and some environmental programming as well.
Perhaps you would think about that, and if anybody has a response, I'd like to hear it.
There are a couple of specifics that we need on the record.
You mentioned, Randall, a national farmed animal health strategy. Is there general agreement by industry on that? Who has it been presented to? It's something we may need to include in our report.
On another point, a lot of people seem to indicate that we need a different disaster component under federal programming. What should it cover? Should it cover trade disputes or not, and what should the share be? If there's a flood in a city, the federal government pays 90%. If there's a flood on farmland, the federal government pays 60%, if they pay at all. Should there be 90% funding by the feds in terms of disaster, whether it be disease, such as BSE, trade action, or whatever?