Thanks, Chair.
I just want to follow up on some of this interesting discussion.
The first thing I'd like to do is to address Kevin's question of what the aim is of business risk management. Certainly, from a government perspective, I think it's to get farmers through a difficult time, but it's not meant to mask market signals.
So, what does that mean? That means that if prices of a particular commodity drop for a certain amount of time, usually for reasons beyond the control of the farmer, it's nice to have a safety net in place. However, if the market has fundamentally changed, you do not want a government program masking what the market is telling you, which is that the ground has shifted and therefore that sector must shift in order to be better acclimatized to the new reality.
That's always a juggling act, in a sense. It's always difficult to find that median. But I think we saw that a bit with the pork crisis, in that the pork sector knew that the sector was too big for reasons beyond its control. There were a number of factors, including H1N1, and the COOL legislation in the U.S. There was a program that we launched to help reduce the pork herd. The pork herd was reduced and prices are going up, so our program did not mask the market reality. I think that's always the risk.
I think the second thing, just to go back to what Travis was saying, is that everyone has a role to play in risk management. The farmer himself on the ground has a vital role to play, but so do governments. International trade plays a key role. When the marketplace is bigger for farmers, it is better for farmers. Certainly, opening external markets for farmers is a good thing, because it's just a bigger marketplace in which to sell your product.
Anyway, a few comments on that.
The other thing I wanted to comment on was this business that federal programming is meant to provide a level playing field. From the federal perspective, I think it would not be good policy for the federal government to dictate to the provinces, “You cannot have a regional program”. Certainly in my riding I hear two messages: we want a level playing field, and we want regional flexibility. It's very hard to have both. As soon as you have regional flexibility, you don't have a level playing field.
So the way it's normally handled—the way I see it, at least—is that federal programming applies equally to farmers across the country. That's where the level playing field comes in. However, the regional flexibility comes in with Alberta saying, “We're going to launch a program for this commodity because this is very important to us.” The federal government can't really shut that down. The province can spend money on what it likes. In Ontario, it's something else, and in Quebec it's something else. That's where the regional flexibility comes in.
Now I've chewed through a lot of my time, but I wanted to comment on that because I think this is an interesting discussion that helps clarify what business risk management is all about.
In past meetings—because we've had a number of meetings on business risk management—one of the things that I've been putting out there for discussion is that, just given the economic reality, there's a pie of funding that is now being made available to business risk management. It's shared by the federal government and the provinces. It is unlikely that this pie is going to grow, and so there are many suggestions to improve AgriInvest. Oh, let's improve AgriStability, while we're at it. AgriRecovery should be more responsive. But all of these things, if you were to do them all at once, grow the pie.
What I'm very interested in knowing is what your opinions are on which programs work best for farmers. If you had to move some resources from one program to another, which ones would you be looking at? I've heard positive things about AgriInvest, and more negative things about AgriStability. Not to shut down AgriStability, but are you comfortable saying that more of the resources that might be spent in AgriStability should actually move over to AgriInvest, maybe to increase the cap or to increase the amount of coverage a farmer can provide on his commodities through AgriInvest? So I'd like to know your feelings on what programs actually work, if you had to actually say, “Let's diminish one to enhance another”.
I guess I'll start with Travis.