Thank you very much.
My president, Clare Schlegel, who was scheduled to come, sends his apologies for not being able to make it up from southwestern Ontario. His farm situation required him to be there today.
We appreciate this opportunity because the Canadian dollar impact has been, I guess, the single defining characteristic of what separates us from the rest of the world in the pork industry. We are an industry that's heavily exposed to the global economy. Roughly two-thirds of our production is subject to export, either as live animals or as pork products. That industry generates around $3-plus billion of foreign exchange, and when we put on the multipliers, etc., it generates about $10 billion of economic activity in the country.
Some members of the committee will have heard of the stress the Canadian livestock industry is experiencing. I include in that the beef industry because they, like us, are very much export oriented, very much exposed to the world market conditions and, of course, the Canadian dollar.
We are currently looking at losses in the range of $40 to $60 per pig. We will explain that if we had exchange rates of even two years ago, we would at be in at least a break-even situation currently.
I would draw your attention to a little handout. Has it been distributed, Madam Clerk? Thank you.
On the first page is an excerpt from a study we had done in the fall of 2003 and actually updated more recently. We should probably make that available to the committee. But I would just ask you to look at the numerated lines of what determines Canadian pork and hog prices.
Number one is the U.S. price, because the U.S. production dominates the North American market we operate in. Number two is exchange rate values. Then number three is the price spread, which would be the difference between Canada and the U.S. that is determined by whether we export or import on a net basis.
So it is very much a U.S.-determined price. The Canadian dollar is simply the medium by which we are paid for our products. We do not have a made-in-Canada price.
The impact of the Canadian dollar exchange rate difference, I think, is very well illustrated on this next chart, where we have simply taken the series of Canadian prices and U.S. prices in their own currencies—so this would be the nominal prices in their own currencies—and indexed them both so that January 2003 equals 100.
One can observe on the pink line how our price in Canada has spread so far from the United States' as the dollar has appreciated—looking across the line—whereas the United States has prices today that, even though they are depressed, are still 10% above what they were in January 2003. Our prices—by the pink line—have fallen to a level that's about 70%. So U.S. producers are suffering, yes, but they are not experiencing anything like what we are experiencing.
The world pork economy has been impacted, first, by high grain prices, which have been driven very much by the U.S. biofuels policy. That has assisted, certainly, the grains industry, which was terribly in need of better prices, but it has resulted in quite a steep increase in those grain input costs. Secondly, the world pork economy has gone into a bit of a downturn. On top of that, then, is our dollar impact, which I think this graph explains very well.
We do experience some gains as the Canadian dollar appreciates....
Should I slow down or stop?