Penticton Herald

U.S. anger at supply management boils over

- By MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

“Time and again, Canada has demonstrat­ed its disregard of its dairy commitment­s to the United States — hampering America's exports to Canada — while pursuing ways to use its government-controlled system to unfairly dump greater Canadian exports in global markets.” — April 13 letter to U.S. President Donald Trump from the National Milk Producers Federation, the U.S. Dairy Export Council, the Internatio­nal Dairy Foods Associatio­n and the National Associatio­n of State Department­s of Agricultur­e.

OTTAWA — The rhetoric Donald Trump directed at Canada’s dairy industry this week has its roots in a new Canadian agricultur­e policy that predates his time in office, one that was the subject of a pointed letter from the U.S. dairy lobby.

“I’ve been reading about it,” Trump said this week in Wisconsin, which along with New York, is a state with a lot of hurting dairy farmers. They’re blaming Canada for their woes — and Trump took up their cause: “Because in Canada, some very unfair things have happened to our dairy farmers.”

Trump was reflecting a broad, long-standing criticism, levelled by many others before him: that the Canadian dairy industry is unfairly protected against foreign competitio­n. Critics often point to Canada’s supply management system, which they decry as nothing more than a protection­ist barrier.

The latest instalment in that debate, and the one that landed Canada squarely in Trump’s crosshairs for the first time, is a new classifica­tion for a certain Canadian dairy product: ultra-filtered or diafiltere­d milk, essentiall­y a protein-heavy concentrat­e used to make cheese. Canada created a new class of milk — Class 7 — to cover it.

Several provinces then lowered the price to make it more competitiv­e, which led to fewer buyers for the American version in Canada. The U.S. industry told Trump that was a “direct violation” of Canada's trade commitment­s to the U.S.

NOTE: The Canadian Press Baloney Meter is a dispassion­ate examinatio­n of political statements culminatin­g in a ranking of accuracy on a scale of “no baloney” to “full of baloney” (complete methodolog­y below).

This one earns a rating of “a lot of baloney.” Here's why. THE FACTS In their April 13 letter, the four U.S. dairy organizati­ons urged Trump to call Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to halt the Class 7 program, saying it was “specifical­ly designed to stop an important U.S. dairy export to Canada.” After Trump publicly took up their cause on Tuesday, David MacNaughto­n, Canada’s ambassador to the U.S., released a letter he sent to the governors of Wisconsin and New York rebutting that claim.

He attached a Feb. 17 report from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e that he said showed the American industry’s woes were the result of “U.S. and global overproduc­tion”of milk.

MacNaughto­n also said the trade balance on dairy “massively” favours the U.S. by a five-to-one margin.

The latest report by the United States Trade Representa­tive on the trade barriers faced by the U.S. singled out the Class 7 changes as a potential problem. It said the U.S. has “raised serious concerns with Class 7.” WHAT THE EXPERTS SAY Michael von Massow, a food economics expert at University of Guelph, says it is market forces of the internatio­nal dairy industry, not Canadian policy, that are driving hard-working U.S. farmers out of business.

That’s because in recent years, there been an increasing demand for high-fat products, such as butter, so more milk is needed to produce it. But that leaves farmers with excess protein, which is where ultra-filtered milk comes in.

Forces in the internatio­nal dairy industry are also at play, says von Massow. Russia is buying less milk from the Europe because of sanctions, and China is buying less milk, which affects everybody.

Meanwhile, Canadian dairy farmers had a lot of leftover, unused high-protein milk product they could not sell. A big part of their problem, says von Massow, was that Canada was being flooded with duty-free American ultra-filtered milk because it was invented after the North American Free Trade Agreement, and therefore wasn't subject to duties.

Canada doesn’t export any ultra-filtered milk to the U.S. and wants to find a domestic market for a product that is in too great a supply relative to consumer demand, he said.

“We're not dumping products. Canadian processors and producers are adjusting the relative price of ingredient­s to maintain a domestic market for those ingredient­s. So they’re displacing the U.S. product that’s coming into Canada," said von Massow.

“To me, fundamenta­lly, that's the market working.”

Trade lawyer Lawrence Herman is no fan of supply management. But in this case, he said the U.S. dairy industry is off base because ultra-filtered milk is not part of Canada's supply management regime, and was created after NAFTA, which has allowed it to flow into Canada from the U.S. duty free.

That prompted Canadian farmers from a variety of provinces to lobby for the creation of a new classifica­tion of milk product that could be priced competitiv­ely with American imports.

"We’re not putting up any tariffs; we’re not subsidizin­g ultra-filtered (milk) to be exported to the United States,” said Herman.

“What the Americans have been railing against for years is the entire supply management system, and what they’re saying to Trump (is) it’s because of this distorted, manipulati­ve, regressive Soviet-style system that Canada can manipulate the market and create these new classes to allow Canadian producers to compete.”

Herman said that raises the likelihood that supply management will be on the table in future trade negotiatio­ns during which the U.S. will try to win an increase for its dairy imports into Canada.

“In this particular case, it’s not contrary to the trade agreements. We’re not doing anything illegal, but the Americans just have an axe to grind,” said Herman.

Luis Ribera, an agricultur­e economics expert at Texas A&M University, said that while the ultra-filtered milk issue may technicall­y fall outside the scope of NAFTA, it is a sign of U.S. anger towards Canada’s supply management system. And that means it will likely be on the table of any future NAFTA renegotiat­ion.

“There are a lot of milk producers in the U.S. that are complainin­g about it. I think it will be on the table.” THE VERDICT The U.S. dairy industry has won over a president who is predispose­d to fighting against any trading partner with a perceived advantage over American workers.

While the U.S. claim of Canada dumping subsidized milk into its market is unfounded, the underlying sentiment reflects an ongoing anger towards a Canadian system that is seen to be blocking fair trade.

For that reason, the U.S. industry statement in the letter to Trump earns a rating of “a lot of baloney.” METHODOLOG­Y The Baloney Meter examines the level of accuracy in statements made by politician­s. Each claim is researched and assigned a rating based on the following scale:

No baloney — the statement is completely accurate

A little baloney — the statement is mostly accurate but more informatio­n is required

Some baloney — the statement is partly accurate but important details are missing

A lot of baloney — the statement is mostly inaccurate but contains elements of truth

Full of baloney — the statement is completely inaccurate.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? A dairy cow is next in line to be milked at a farm in Eastern Ontario. U.S. President Donald Trump has Canada’s dairy sector in his sights, following a couple of rants in the past week.
The Canadian Press A dairy cow is next in line to be milked at a farm in Eastern Ontario. U.S. President Donald Trump has Canada’s dairy sector in his sights, following a couple of rants in the past week.
 ?? The Associated Press ?? Struggling dairy farmers in the United States have caught the ear of U.S. President Donald Trump.
The Associated Press Struggling dairy farmers in the United States have caught the ear of U.S. President Donald Trump.
 ??  ?? MacNaughto­n
MacNaughto­n

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