The Welland Tribune

Budget largely ignores food sector

Feds pay lip service to rural residents, but Canadians are able to see through it

- SYLVAIN CHARLEBOIS

Most people expected an electoral budget, and that is exactly what Canadians got. For the agrifood sector, the budget was underwhelm­ing at best, and provided little hope for the near future.

Let’s start with supply management. It was interestin­g to see that the Liberals opted to do exactly what the Harper government did in the middle of an election campaign, back in 2015. At the time, the Conservati­ves hastily announced an out-of-nowhere $4-billion compensati­on package for supply-managed sectors, amid signing the defunct Transpacif­ic Partnershi­p (TPP) agreement, now known as Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (CPTPP). As in 2015, the Liberals provided no hint as to how they intend to make our supply-managed sectors more competitiv­e in the future. Monies will be allocated based on speculatio­n and presumptio­ns, just to buy peace, since no timeline for the compensati­on was provided.

This time, the sum of $3.9 billion in funding is budgeted, which includes $2.15 billion in direct compensati­on. The sum also includes another $1.5 billion for a Quota Value Guarantee Program that would be applied on an on-demand basis when the quota has been sold. In other words, Canadians will be acquiring quotas back from farmers, initially given out years ago, and at no charge. The motivation to procure votes in Quebec for the upcoming election was extremely obvious. To do this right, the budget should have also looked beyond supply management, to support other sectors that are also negatively affected by trade.

So, this is the path chosen by the Liberals. We get to keep an outdated system while subsidizin­g farmers who have prided themselves for years on not accepting public subsidies. Compensati­ng farmers without a plan for the future of supply management is the worst possible scenario for everyone, starting with the farmers themselves. They will only see their sector shrink further, especially in dairy, and many more farms will disappear with no strategy for less populous regions in the country, like the Prairies and the Atlantic. This will be a slow and painful way to go.

Nothing is planned for other commoditie­s, including canola, pulses and others, affected by quasi-embargoes and trade disputes. There is a small budget, at least, set aside for African Swine Fever, a disaster-inwaiting for our hog sector. It is just a matter of time before the disease hits North America. Once it does, we’ll need to brace ourselves for another mad cow type of scenario.

What was interestin­g is that the compensati­on program does not extend to concession­s made under NAFTA 2.0, also known as the United States, Mexico and Canada Agreement. This is likely the Liberals’ way of stating that the deal is damaging for many agricultur­al sectors and therefore stands little or no chance of being ratified. This is as good an admission as we will get from the Liberals, and we should not expect more. It is also probably the only thing which made sense for the agrifood sector in this budget.

Some provisions were made for a food strategy. If Canada wants to make good on the aspiration­s of our newly-minted Food Guide, our agricultur­al landscape will need to change, and follow a new, much needed strategy. We need more fruits and vegetables in this country. However, a budget of $134 million over five years toward this end is hardly anything. Quebec, a province with a population of under nine million and which has just adopted its own food strategy, is spending more than double that sum, in this year alone.

Our food processing folks, who represent the largest manufactur­ing sector in the country, were given peanuts. The budget plans to award $100 million to support innovation and plant upkeep projects. Given that the cradle of food innovation has always been food processing, that sum is almost insulting to the 250,000 people working in this sector.

A total of $24 million is dedicated to food fraud, in support of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA)’s effort to crack down on the cheaters. It is estimated that food fraud is costing our agrifood sector anywhere between $10 to $30 billion a year. This problem is massive, so the CFIA needs all the help it can get.

For agrifood, this budget regrettabl­y doesn’t accomplish much, other than admitting that the USMCA trade agreement was a bad deal. But everyone knew that already.

For the rest, the budget feels like the Liberals, an urban-focused government, are simply checking boxes to please a sector that it barely understand­s. But Canadians are smarter than that.

Sylvain Charlebois is scientific director of the Canadian Agrifood Foresight Institute, a professor in food distributi­on and policy at Dalhousie University, and a senior fellow with the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies.

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