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Author Archives: Other News Sources
How subsidies are ploughing the family farm under
(March 22, 2001) Government intervention has reversed the economics of farming, making large-scale monoculture operations more secure than the family farm, says Urban Renaissance Institute’s Lawrence Solomon. The family farm is inherently economic. Large-scale farming is not. The opposite appears to be the case only because governments reversed the economics of farm production through subsidies, particularly subsidies that reduced the risks that farmers face. Continue reading
Posted in Agriculture (Rural)
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Making the case against farm subsidies
(March 18, 2001) In 1985, New Zealand stopped bailing out farmers. Today, its rural areas are thriving. It’s a ‘brutal process,’ experts say, but it would work in Canada. What if Canada decided to go cold turkey and eliminated all farm subsidies? Would such a decision mark the end of farming in this country? Not a chance. Could it be done? The simple answer is yes. New Zealand eliminated farm subsidies 16 years ago and has a strong agriculture industry today. Continue reading
Posted in Agriculture (Rural)
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Experts predict end of the family farm
(March 15, 2001) Subsidies won’t save Canada’s family farms. Farmers themselves admit that, despite taking to the streets across the country yesterday to demand that governments more than double their latest $500-million aid package. Darrin Qualman, the executive secretary of the National Farmers Union in Saskatoon, says farmers need government aid now to survive, but it is more important for Ottawa to respond to their plight with more than money. Continue reading
Posted in Agriculture (Rural)
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Lumber Production
(March 1, 2001) Read Free Trade For Dummies- Lawrence Solomon, in Free Trade for Dummies (Feb. 6), provides a misleading picture of the stumpage system that applies to timber harvesting in British Columbia. Continue reading
Posted in Forestry
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Logging for a Loss
(February 24, 2001) Logging a majestic stand of hemlock and balsam in British Columbia’s coastal rainforest costs logging companies $100 a cubic metre. Selling the hemlock gets them an average of $60 a cubic metre, the balsam gets them less. "We lose $40 on every cubic metre of hemlock that we bring to the sawmill," explains Steve Crombie of Interfor, one of B.C.’s large product exporters. Continue reading
Posted in Forestry
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