Thanks for a difficult question.
Being involved in the management group that has $75 million in the hog farm transition program, I've had the ability to watch the country shrink. What has happened in the last five years has destroyed what hog industry there was in eastern Canada, east of Quebec. They're down to 100,000 hogs a week as opposed to 600,000 or 700,000 five years ago. The same is true once you get past the Manitoba-Saskatchewan border. The industry has been devastated.
The industry in Canada is being concentrated in Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec. Ontario is where the dominant share of our country's population is. And there will always be a hog industry in our country and in Ontario. I can't predict exactly where it will be, because I have no idea, of the people who will survive this battle, how many will be mortally wounded.
The challenge we have, if you get right down to it, is that the answer is not in safety nets. The dollars are in the food chain. Galen Weston's corporation last week announced quarterly profits of $213 million. My friend here, the accountant, will tell you that's after they're done squeezing every penny out so they wouldn't have to pay tax.
They had the same issues in England about 12 years ago, and they fixed it by having a royal commission. The royal commission came in and said that goal number one is that farmers shall be profitable. Goal number two is product identification—we'll identify our products so that consumers have a choice. The livestock industry in Britain, especially the swine industry, was destroyed by retailers demanding what they thought consumers wanted. And they flooded the shelves with product that was raised to those specifications.
Well, you know what? Consumers are consumers and citizens are citizens. Citizens want to do what's right. They'll tell you in a survey that they'll buy it if it's identified, they'll buy it if it has traceability, and they'll buy it if it's organic. But the minute they walk past the grocery store shelves they become consumers, and they buy the best product at the lowest price. It's a mindset that we have to change.
I honestly believe there are enough consumer dollars in the food chain today that no one who produces product in Canada that's sold on a Canadian grocery store shelf should have to be begging the government for money to feed his family and to support his operation.
I have the same issue with my family at home. I have two children in university, both taking ag courses. On the bulletin board in our office we have a little cartoon that came out of The Globe and Mail . It's a son and his dad, standing on a cliff overlooking a field full of cattle. The dad has his arm around his son and he says, “Someday, son, this will all be yours”, and the little balloon coming out of the side of the kid's head says, “This must be some kind of family curse.”
If there is profitability in agriculture, we will have another generation and we will feed the world. If we continue to let cheap products from other countries flood our shelves and feed our consumers, then we get what we ask for, gentlemen and ladies.