Farmscape for March 29, 2017
The Research Lead with Agri-Food Economic Systems says U.S. food processors need to be sensitive to the potential impact on them of reduced access to imported Canadian products under a renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Agri-Food Economic Systems has released an Independent Agri-Food Policy Note which looks at the prospects for the U.S. agri-food industry under a NAFTA renegotiation.
Dr. Al Mussell, the Research Lead with Agri-Food Economic Systems, observes the U.S. food processing industry has benefitted from imports of Canadian bulk products, primarily grain, and intermediate imports such as ground grain and livestock.
Clip-Dr. Al Mussell-Agri-Food Economic Systems:
I think the reality is the U.S. wouldn't be able to support its food processing industries at the level they've been able to had they not had access to Canadian products.
Just one example we went through in the policy note is oats.
The U.S. imports oats out of particularly Manitoba, probably elsewhere in western Canada directly down into breakfast cereal manufacturing plants in the United States.
The U.S. is not a large oat producer of its own.
Whether or not it could sustain those kinds of industries, understanding that oats is a big part of what goes into breakfast cereal is perhaps an open question, but probably pretty difficult for them without access to Canada.
The same thing on pork products, other red meat products.
We know that the U.S. imports a significant volume of Canadian cattle and hogs for processing in their plants and these products, they turn around and export back to Canada as well as elsewhere as ready to eat products.
That's value added that's added in the U.S.
Dr. Mussell says, depending on how the NAFTA renegotiation proceeds, U.S. food processors can't assume they'll continue to have the same kind of access to Canadian products that they've had in the past.
For Farmscape.Ca, I'm Bruce Cochrane.
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