First of all, we're in kind of the distributor class. I just organized that, but we're still on the small side of stuff.
Yes, it's manufacturers versus distributors, and yes, the very large manufacturers are an oligopoly in this country. There's no question. The biggest dairy processors get the most on the CUSMA and TPP side, the lion's share of everything. They are entitled to import quota and so are the distributors, but it works on volume. For Mondo Foods, if I sell a million kilos of product—my combined volume—and someone like the very largest manufacturer sells hundreds of millions of kilos, they get the 99.9% and I get the 0.1%.
That's how it works on CUSMA, which has changed. It used to be an 80-20 rule, but Canada dug in its heels. They changed the agreement, and now we're in a fight with the United States. I don't know how that's going to end, but we'll see how that goes.
It's the same thing with the TPP, which is still intact, in that there is some sharing between the manufacturers and the distributors. For those pools, it's just manufacturers and distributors. The CETA is a different thing. The CETA is the coveted one, right? It's the coveted one because of European cheese, which has always been coveted and wanted by many people in Canada. It has a high demand. Initially, it was only supposed to be distributors and retailers. There are lots of studies. I go back to the 1992 inquiry into the allocation of import quotas as tabled in Parliament in 1992. We've been talking about it since then. I appeared here—yes, we did—in talking about the fair allocation and how it should be, but they got 50% of everything.
For Mondo Foods and this whole threshold thing, it's one set of rules for the manufacturers, between the large and the small—and I'm not begrudging them—but there is a completely different set of rules for distributors like me and the retailers. This moving target, not knowing where we're going to be from year to year, has killed my business, as I've testified.
What does Global Affairs say to get to here? They won't talk to me anymore, not the senior staff. There have been many emails upon emails and conversations that start off very nice, so either they're incapable or they're indifferent. It's one of the two. They're incapable because they don't have the power to do it, or they're just indifferent and they just don't care.
As a matter of fact, I'm going to recite a line that the people of Global Affairs told me. This is the senior management: “Tom, there are winners and losers in this game, and you're on the wrong side of the fence.” Well, tell that to the bank to pay the mortgage after you've just built a business.
That's unacceptable. They won't talk to me. They won't correspond with me—not the director, the deputy director or the senior trade policy analyst—and I've been part of their solutions for so many years. They've come to me so often to participate in their studies, Madam Chair.