I want to thank you for coming. I missed part of your presentation due to a late flight.
I want to centre on two questions I have for you today.
We're talking a lot about the future. We know that research and innovation is not something that bears results within 24 hours, or within 24 years sometimes, but it is there for us in the future. I think we need to encourage that, and I totally support that. But we have to think about the here and now.
We have sectors in our agricultural community that are in serious trouble, and if we don't protect them now, then we won't have them for that future that we're all talking about. I heard Mr. Reid say, and I agree to a point, that we can't follow the Americans down that subsidy road. I agree that none of us should be in that business of subsidization in agriculture, but we're in that way of thinking. We're going to continue that. Europe is going to continue it whether we think so or not. They're going to continue, and so will the Americans.
I did some math, and I calculate that the $4.3 billion we're talking about here as the level we could support at is doable. We just recently announced the reduction of GST by 1%, which is $5.5 billion. It's far more than the total aggregate amount of money that we could spend in agriculture. We just gave that away to Canadians who could perhaps afford to pay that 1%.
But we have a sector, a community of people who are going bankrupt. If they fail to get the money from the treasury, where else are farmers going to get that money? It's not going to come from the marketplace. If they can't go to the treasury and we can't, as farmers, as agriculturalists in this country, go to government and expect some help at least in the near term, then where can we go?
Mr. Reid, back in 1965 when I put my first crop of corn in--I farmed before that, but that was my first crop of corn--I paid $14 a bushel for seed. Today we have varieties that are costing farmers upwards of $200 a unit, which is 80,000 seeds, which is less than 56 pounds. When you look at that, it's 14 times the price of that seed. I got $1.75 for corn then. Today it's $3.75. We maybe took 100 bushels then. Today we're getting 200, and that's at the top end. Some crops don't produce 200 bushels.
Where are we coming out at with this? Where are farmers benefiting from all this research that's being done? Where are the dollars filtering back? There's money in the industry, but it's not filtering back to the farm gate. Those are my two concerns. If we can't deal with the farmers here and now, we won't have them for the future. I hope you can give me some understanding of where we're going, because I'm afraid we're in some serious trouble.