26
Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade

Liberalization

June 2, 2006

Discussion

Mike Nailor

Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Page 2: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

The Fine PrintThe opinions expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter and don’t necessarily reflect those of Chicken Farmers of Ontario, Chicken Farmers of Canada or other supply managed commodities

Page 3: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Supply Management – In Context

• Canada’s Dairy, Poultry and Egg Industries contribute $12.3 billion to the GDP

• Generate $7.4 billion in Farm Cash Receipts (23.3% of all FCR)

• Sustain more the $39 billion in economic activity

• Employ about 215,000 Canadians• Don’t rely on Government assistance

Page 4: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

2000

2002

2004

Mill

ion

s o

f D

olla

rs

Government Payments Received in Supply Management

Page 5: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Supply Management is Not a Closed System

• Canada provides more access to SM commodities than many other countries

• 4% for dairy• 5% for eggs and turkey• 7.5% for chicken• 21% for hatching eggs• U.S. gives 2.8% for dairy and the EU 0.5%

for poultry

Page 6: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Chicken Imports into Canada and the US1986 to 2005

0

20,000

40,000

60,000

80,000

100,000

120,000

140,000

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

'000

kgs

CDN Imports

Page 7: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Chicken Imports into Canada and the US1986 to 2005

0

20,000

40,000

60,000

80,000

100,000

120,000

140,000

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

'000

kgs

CDN Imports U.S. Imports

Page 8: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Market Access- Chicken Canada/US

Canada US

Page 9: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Market Access- Chicken Canada/US

Canada USTariff 238%-249% 5%

Page 10: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Market Access- Chicken Canada/US

Canada USTariff 238%-249% 5%Market Access/TRQ 7.5% No limit

Page 11: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Market Access- Chicken Canada/US

Canada USTariff 238%-249% 5%Market Access/TRQ 7.5% No limit2004 Import level 120 mkg 12 mkg

Page 12: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Market Access- Chicken Canada/US

• It is about real market access

Canada USTariff 238%-249% 5%Market Access/TRQ 7.5% No limit2004 Import level 120 mkg 12 mkg

Page 13: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

General Comments about the Paper

• Key Features of Supply Management (SM)– 3 pillars

• Planned production

• Pricing authority

• Import Controls

• SM farm cash receipts closer to 23%

• 80% of Cdn Ag export oriented 20% SM– Canada is the biggest market of Canadian

products (70%)

Page 14: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

General Comments con’t

• Valuation of Quota Equation makes sense

P=R(1-d)/(r+d-g)

• Could explore this further

P=R(1-d)/(r+d-g-h-b)Where h is the degree of demand from Dutch farmers, and

b is a banks willingness to loan money

Page 15: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

General Comments con’t

• “Water” in the tariff?

Page 16: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Functioning Tariff

Canadian Market 100%

Page 17: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Canadian Market100 %

Non-Functioning Tariff

Page 18: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

General Comments con’t

• Paper references room to cut chicken tariffs 50-70% based on iced broilers– In 2005 this accounted for 0.2% of all imports– Vast majority are wings and breast meat– Product in the last 2 years has come in over

tariff (2.3 mkg on evisc. basis in 2005)– Boneless breast from Brazil can land with tariff

at close to Canadian prices

Page 19: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Overall Comments

• Discussion on options is premature

• Options need to be commodity specific

Page 20: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Options for Adjustment Assistance

• The debate over assistance– “why should some workers be treated better”

• Farmers are business owners

• Financially invested in the industry

• Bring stability to rural communities

Page 21: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Options for Adjustment Assistance

• The debate over assistance– “producers knew the risk”

• Did they?

• Risk is clearly there but those that hold the power have been saying “all the right things”

• Unanimous motion of the House of Commons on SM

Page 22: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Options…

• Book Value

• Aussie Model

• Two Quota Option

• Tobacco and Peanut in the US

• Full Buyout

Page 23: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Depends on WTO agreement

• The are 3 pillars to SM• Planned Production• Pricing Authority• Import Controls

Page 24: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Depends on the Cdn Government

• What happens to the other two pillars?• Planned Production• Pricing Authority

• Area for consideration….

Page 25: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Is There a Preference?

• If a decision had to be made…

• Supportive of the options that provide the greatest level of assistance

• Full quota buy out

• Tobacco model has merit.

• Farmer choice

Page 26: Options for Supply Management in Canada Under Trade Liberalization June 2, 2006 Discussion Mike Nailor Chicken Farmers of Ontario

Summary

• Premature for the discussion.

• Really depends on what happens at WTO

• Any future analysis needs to be commodity specific.