Good morning.
My name is Darrell Stokes. I’m a farmer in the Drumheller district, about a hundred kilometres east of here. I am accompanied by my friend Ken Larsen, from Benalto, west of Red Deer.
We are pleased to appear before this committee to represent ourselves as farmers as well as members of the Canadian Wheat Board Alliance. It's a new organization that supports the current single-desk monopoly mandate of the Wheat Board and will promote candidates for election to the board of directors.
The subject of your committee's work is young farmers and the future of farming. I would like to be able to tell you that there is a bright future for young people to get into the farming business, but in truth there is not, at least not in the prairie region of western Canada.
The idea that a young person could decide that he or she wanted to start a farm from scratch today is completely out of the question. They recognize that both the economics and the policy environment are hostile. Starting a new farm means borrowing to buy land and equipment. The debt load from this is overwhelming, and does not even begin to deal with operational expenses that come from planting, fertilizing, spraying, and harvesting a crop. This is not an issue that can be solved with loans, even interest-free loans. The economics just do not make sense.
What must be done from this point forward, if young farmers are to have a future, is to help them stay on, or come back to, the family farm. To do that, we must make the economics of farming look reasonable, and they are not reasonable today.
Although farmers’ gross income has risen substantially in the last 20 to 30 years, our net income is almost the same. We grow more bushels, we transport more bushels, we sell more bushels than ever before, and yet farmers see virtually the same number of dollars profit per acre as we did 30, 40, 50 years ago. Adjusting for inflation, we actually get less than the previous generations.
Farmers are doing their job. They're providing food for a hungry planet, investing in new technologies, being good stewards of the land. Yet the benefit from most of this goes not to the farmer, but to the agri-business industry that has grown exponentially in the recent past. The huge disparity, measured in billions of dollars, between the value of what farmers produce and what they get paid is swallowed up by input suppliers, rights holders, processors, transport operators, and retailers.
We all want the best for our children, the young farmers. We want them to enjoy happy, productive lives. We want them to get an education. You have to ask, why on earth would they want to come back to the farm? Why would they want to take on the headaches and stresses of trying to operate a farm, struggling to earn one or two percentage points on their huge investment? Why wouldn’t they use their education to make a comfortable living without the struggle?
Well, there is a reason that they might. A farmer’s life is a good one. We all know about the fresh air and the sunshine, but there's more to it than that. You can take pride in a day’s work despite the hardships. You can have the satisfaction of knowing that your labour has meaning, that your contribution to your community helps it stay strong and vibrant. A farmer’s life presumes a certain dedication to an idea that rural Canada can work. But all of those reasons for optimism will wither away without the economic model that will allow young people to look forward to a future.
Do we expect that agri-business input suppliers will choose to lower their prices so that farm costs can be kept to a reasonable level? No. They'll charge whatever the market will bear. That's the way they operate.
Do we suppose that oilseed processors or beef packing plants will choose to give the farmer a little better price for their product? No. They'll pay as little as possible to get what they need. That’s their business model.
Do we possibly think that the transportation industry for agricultural products will take a little less for their services so the farmer doesn’t have to pay so much? No. Their business model says “Get as much as you can for your shareholders”.
Do we expect that the food wholesale and retail industry will ever provide parity from their profit margin back to the farmer? No. Their business model says “Buy for as little as possible and sell for as much as possible”.
So where among all that can there be any optimism about the future of farming, where our only business model is to buy at retail prices and sell our production at wholesale prices?
Years of pressure to deregulate, ostensibly to foster competition and maintain low consumer prices, has led to our current situation. Today, in the era of corporate consolidation and takeover, there is less competition. Although Canadian consumers spend less of their household income on food than any other consumers in the world, are they getting the benefit of low farm-gate prices?
The responsibility for maintaining low consumer prices seems to fall on the back of the original producer, the farmer, all by himself. It shouldn’t, but it does.
The only economic factor that farmers can rely on is cooperative effort. If farmers are forced to stand alone, as individuals, against those who make the rules and set the prices, farmers will continue to lose. It is inevitable.
The history of western Canada shows us that farmers lose when they stand alone. Our grandparents created the Canadian Wheat Board so that farmers did not have to stand alone.
If we are to promote the idea of a viable future for our young people and there is to be a future for the family farm, then we need institutions that will serve the farmers' best interests, in the same way that a corporation is obligated to serve its shareholders' interests. The Canadian Wheat Board is an institution whose sole purpose is to serve the farmers' best interests. The Canadian International Grains Institute and the Canadian Grain Commission are also instrumental in promoting Canadian agricultural products around the world for the benefit of farmers.
These institutional safeguards are constantly under political pressure. Private enterprise, looking for ways to maximize shareholder returns, wants them out of the way and lobbies our federal government continually to weaken them. If young farmers are to have a future, we need to be strong and vocal in our support of these institutions. If we are silent, our political representatives will be unduly influenced by those who would benefit from the demise of these safeguards.
If our ancestors had not created the Canadian Wheat Board, and if it had not been strengthened with a farmer-controlled board of directors, then the international and domestic marketing of Canadian wheat, durum, and barley for human consumption would be controlled by private agri-businesses. Would we then expect that, without the board, these companies would pay the farmer whatever they sell the grain for and take a little overhead fee? No, I think you might agree that they would pay the farmer as little as possible and sell it for as much as possible.
Most of you probably know how the Wheat Board works, but just in case there is any misunderstanding, let me take a moment.
At the time of delivery, the board pays the farmer a portion of the projected selling price; then it takes the farmer's grain into the marketplace and sells it for the best price it can get at that time. After the year’s business has been completed and all the sales have been made, the board pays the farmer the balance of the pooled selling price for that product and grade over the course of the whole year.
In 2009, the charge for doing all that plus the board’s invaluable market development and promotion of Canadian grains cost the farmer nine cents per bushel. Can you imagine any of those aforementioned agri-businesses doing that? Neither can I.
In conclusion, I want to make the point that the future of the family farm and of the young farmers who will raise the next generation of farmers has to include farmers standing together, with market control. If we lose the wheat board and have to stand alone in the marketplace, then farming as we know it will begin to die with the passing of my generation.
One view of the future has family farms being replaced by huge, monolithic farming corporations run by MBAs and accountants whose feel for the land is non-existent. Farm labour will be hired for minimum wage, nobody will care about the environment, and rural communities will fade away. You don’t have to look very far to see some of this happening already.
The message I would like this committee to take back to Ottawa is to stop the political worship at the altar of free trade and open markets and to look at the reality. An honest look at the end result of this strategy shows that farmers have not benefited. It would also be fair to ask whether consumers have benefited. Our impression is that the only people to have benefited are those who sit in the middle between farmers and consumers, and of course those whose living is so enriched by providing farm inputs.
I hope you can take the time to review the package we've distributed to you containing some additional material that we couldn't fit into our short time. The National Farmers Union has put together a very interesting look at how farmers and consumers have fared as a result of 19 years of free trade and open markets. There will be an updated version of this brochure available this summer.
In conclusion, the young farmers of the future need a chance to survive. They need all the help they can get from family, neighbours, friends, and the institutions that have been created to serve them. Let’s keep the young farmers we have and give them reason for optimism.