meta WFU calls for dose of reality in trade deal response :: The Bullvine - The Dairy Information You Want To Know When You Need It

WFU calls for dose of reality in trade deal response

The Wisconsin Farmers Union in statement clarified the actual impact that the proposed U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement trade deal will have on the U.S. dairy industry. The U.S. Trade Representative reports that the deal would open the door for an additional $560 million worth of U.S. dairy products to enter the Canadian market duty-free. That is about 1.5 percent of the total value of U.S. dairy production.

“A 1.5 percent increase in dairy products sold is not going to be the salvation of our dairy industry,” said WFU President Darin Von Ruden. Von Ruden, who dairy farms in Westby, noted that the U.S. has increased domestic dairy production in 18 of the last 20 years, by about 1.5 percent each year.

“This small increase in sales to Canada may not even offset our own domestic production increase this year, not to mention where we’ll be at two or three or 10 years down the road,” Von Ruden said. “We need to exercise some discipline on our own side of the border rather than looking for salvation outside our borders.”

Von Ruden reiterated WFU’s longstanding call for a federal policy mechanism to balance supply and demand in the dairy industry.

“Wisconsin dairy farmers are losing money each time they walk into the barn, because the flood of milk on the market has driven the price lower than what it costs to produce it. No government bailout or new trade deal is going to solve that problem. We need a federal framework for bringing milk production in line with demand, and the longer the federal government puts off doing this, the more equity our farms will lose,” he said.

Agricultural Financial Advisor data from 2017 showed that the average farm lost $1.04 per hundredweight of milk produced. The USMCA trade deal may provide some additional market for U.S dairy products, but without supply management, there is no guarantee that prices will come up to reduce the losses farmers are facing every day.

Von Ruden also noted that the USMCA fails to achieve two other important fair trade priorities: “First, the agreement does not provide for Country-of-Origin Labeling for U.S. meat products, which is supported by 90 percent of Americans. Second, the USMCA fails to eliminate the Investor-State Dispute Settlement mechanism. ISDS allows multinational corporations to overturn U.S. laws that might reduce their profits. ISDS prioritizes the profits of multinational corporations over the needs of U.S. citizens and is a direct affront to U.S. sovereignty.”

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