Mr. Speaker, I am thankful for the opportunity to speak on this motion. I will be splitting my time.
The Government of Canada recognizes that Canadian primary producers face unique challenges in operating their businesses. Not only must they deal with the pests, the diseases and the unpredictable Canadian weather, they must also do business in a highly volatile, competitive and often heavily subsidized international marketplace.
To help Canadian producers meet those challenges the federal government is investing $600 million each year in farmer safety nets. The provinces are spending an additional $400 million. This envelope of $1 billion in addition to the funds contributed by producers funds a system that helps farmers deal with the production, the material risks and the market risks they must manage in their farming operations.
The cornerstone of this system is the net income stabilization account, NISA, a voluntary program that can provide a source of money for farmers during market downturns. This money can be used for whatever purpose they choose, to pay input suppliers, to meet operating and term loan payments or to supplement their personal incomes. As the minister mentioned earlier, NISA has been a tremendous success with participants accounting for 85% of the net sales of commodities eligible for the program.
I will briefly describe how the NISA system works and how it helps Canadian farmers deal with market downturns. Each year a producer participating in the program can place up to 3% of his or her eligible net sales into his or her individual NISA account with a maximum of $7,500. The federal and provincial governments match that money and pay a 3% interest bonus on the farmer's share. That is fair.
When a downturn comes, producers can withdraw funds from their account up to the level of their average income over the last five years. Since 1991 Canadian producers have saved almost $2.5 billion in their NISA accounts. Most of that money has been contributed over the last three or four high income years. In general, producers of all primary commodities except for supply management products like dairy, eggs and poultry are now eligible to participate in this program.
Farmers who are not already enrolled in NISA are permitted to make a late application up until the end of December. Benefits for the 1997 year that would be reduced by a late filing penalty could still add up to a significant amount.
Most farmers choose to participate in this excellent risk management program. That means they have a tool to help them manage through a price slump or a market downturn like the one currently being experienced. On a national level, an Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada preliminary analysis suggests that the majority of active NISA participants have enough money in their accounts to see them through the winter.
By contrast, American farmers did not have this. They had to wait and see what kind of bailout package Congress and the White House would devise but in Canada farmers and governments have been putting money into the bank every year. Thanks to NISA, most Canadian farmers have money in the bank to fill in their income gaps.
Canadian farmers have helped federal and provincial governments to build the farm income system we now have in place. It is a system that puts farmers in charge, that encourages farmers to save money during the good years and helps them to manage their way through the lean years.
This year we implemented a new interim withdrawal mechanism for NISA so farmers can have access to their money when they need it the most. So far producers have withdrawn only 3% of the $2.5 billion that has been accumulated in NISA. If the need for additional funds increases in the coming months, they will be able to decide based on their own individual circumstances when and how much to withdraw from their accounts.
In conclusion, I am very pleased that Canadian farmers have worked with Government of Canada and the provinces to put in place the kind of tools they need to help them through tough times. They continue to work with the government and with the provinces through the long term review process of the farm income production system currently underway and scheduled to wrap up this coming spring.
More immediately, the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food is meeting with farm group leaders and provincial ministers tomorrow to discuss this serious farm income situation. As well as the tools we have in place now for these farmers, they will discuss how these tools can be used to maximum effectiveness and if there are other adjustments that we should be making to our safety system for farmers.
Once more farmers themselves are at the table deciding how to deal with the ups and downs in the markets and what the weather and world conditions can bring. I am glad to see so many commodity groups, along with all the provinces, joining our minister tomorrow.