Recently in Cost of Rome Burning Series Category
Blog entries from early May ("Just Fiddlin...?" and "Just Fiddlin...? (Part 2)") painted a picture of the extent of unresolved policy issues in Canadian agriculture. As we indicated in those earlier entries we would post follow-up blog entries to estimate the costs of having improperly aligned policy. This entry is the second follow-up entry. In this entry we provide a rough cost estimate of the widened canola basis in the commodity market. The estimates that we provide are by no means a complete costing of the issues; in fact we encourage comments on our assumptions and alternative ways to valuate the policy issues.
Preliminary estimates show
that the costs of an erratic canola basis could be in the range of $100 in a
one-time loss to an annual $400 million loss (see Table 1). This cost is one
that is borne entirely by farmers (as the entry from two weeks ago indicated
(link), the costs associated with transportation problems are split between
farmers and other system players).
Last week's Illative Blog entry (see link) highlighted three issues that we think are critically in need of examination and analysis. This week we examine three additional issues, followed by a discussion of why the capacity to analyse these issues is limited.
