Madam Speaker, all is not well in the agricultural sector. Despite higher than expected grain prices and the usual spring optimism that all of us prairie folk experience at this time of year, there are many things that concern us. I cannot begin in the short time available tonight to describe everything that is of concern but I have to raise the issues relating to international trade, particularly the activities of the United States government in the marketplace.
I originally rose on March 14 with comments about the U.S. farm bill and grazing fees for cattle. At that time I expressed concern to the minister that not enough was being done to represent the interests of Canadian producers.
Here in Canada we are virtually disarming ourselves in this international agricultural trade war. We have abandoned our long time financial commitment for the transportation of grain to port. We are in the process of deregulating the transportation sector and we have undermined the stability of the supply managed sector. In each case we as a nation have left our farmers and the communities they support with less support than the farmers in the countries with whom we compete in the world marketplace.
Despite our rush to eliminate agricultural subsidies or commitments to the orderly marketing of our products, the United States does not think we have gone far enough. The Americans continue to pressure us, to reduce the authority of the Canadian Wheat Board just as they continue to pressure us to remove more quickly the remaining tariffs that exist for our supply managed products. The Americans do not have a leg to stand on. Their facts do not add up. They are wrong, but that does not stop the Americans from complaining and seeking remedies to their perceived problems.
Canadian farmers ask: Where is the Canadian government? Where is the minister of agriculture? Where are our complaints against the American government which continues to play financial games in the world agricultural marketplace, which again penalizes Canadian producers? Where is the Canadian argument designed to protect Canadian interests?
For example, on March 14 I pointed out that the collapse of the U.S. farm bill means that the Americans have to revert to an old farm bill, which provides massive subsidy levels for corn and price guarantees for wheat. Corn can be subsidized to $7. Wheat can be guaranteed to $9. What Canadian farmer, even at the higher world prices we are receiving today, would not want to see their government guarantee the price of their wheat at $9?
These are the people we are competing against in the international marketplace and our producers cannot do it on their own. It is unfair and the Canadian government has an obligation to stand up and strongly oppose situations like these.
The other example I gave on March 14 was the indirect beef subsidy. The U.S. government owns a lot of grazing land. It leases that land to cattle producers in return for a certain lease payment. The U.S. government just reduced the lease payment on that grazing land by 20 per cent. Is that not another agricultural subsidy we should be addressing?
On supply management, the U.S. has instigated yet another challenge that has made Canadian poultry, dairy and egg producers very nervous, all this despite the fact that the Canadian case before the NAFTA panel is clear, strong and correct.
Canada is doing more to eliminate or reduce agricultural subsidies than any of our trading partners or competitors. In most cases Canada is doing more and doing it more quickly than is required by NAFTA or GATT agreements.
In conclusion, we are spending all of our time defending ourselves against petty political U.S. accusations. Perhaps it is time we made some accusations of our own and forced the U.S. to account for some of its unfriendly activities.
Will the minister of agriculture assure Canadian producers and the communities they support that he will not only defend Canadian interests but will also challenge the U.S. violations of our negotiated trade agreements?