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Talk:Dairy and poultry supply management in Canada

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POV tag

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I have restored the {{POV}} tag because I see no evidence that a discussion has resolved the dispute. In fact, I notice another discussion above in which a few editors are engaged to attempt to resolve the dispute, so clearly this tag was removed prematurely. Note that no single editor can remove this tag unilaterally - there must be a consensus that neutrality has been achieved. Mindmatrix

Label amended to {{POV section}}. BobKilcoyne (talk) 04:28, 26 April 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Very awkward sentence needs rehabilitation or removal

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2620:22:4000:110:1FFE:4A72:99F3:2250 (talk This comment seems pointless in terms of a Wikipedia article. NAFTA Negotiations are ongoing. It isn't necessary to add every step of the negotiations. Wikipedia is not the place to win or lose a trade deal. The sentence you added has numerous spelling and grammar mistakes. Capitalization here "U.S. ag secretary". Please use DMY as noted in template.

It was revaled by Sonn Perdue that Chrystia Freeland made any offer but it was rejected by the Perdue for not being fair enough.[1]

References

  1. ^ "Canada made dairy offer, but it wasn't enough: U.S. ag secretary". RealAgriculture.com. Retrieved 2018-07-12.

Direct quote without quotation marks

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This edit by 2620:22:4000:110:1FFE:4A72:99F3:2250 (talk is a direct quote without quotation marks. A space was missing. Please use MDY.

This is the exact quote:"A bi-partisan cohort of more than 60 members of Congress says the United States must not cave on its demands for more dairy access to Canada in an updated NAFTA agreement, which comes as ministers from all three North American countries continue to negotiate a trade pact." This was in the article:A bi-partisan cohort of more than 60 members of Congress says the United States must not cave on its demands for more dairy access to Canada in an updated NAFTA agreement.[1]

References

  1. ^ "Canada's 'abusive' dairy policies need to go: congressmen - iPolitics". iPolitics. 2018-04-25. Retrieved 2018-07-12.

Duplicate content

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I removed this duplicate content. The Conference Board of Canada Goldfarb report is used elsewhere so I filled in the ref details.

Hall Findlay listed the factors considered by the dairy industry, when setting the price as production costs, the current market price for the goods, and a reasonable return on the farmer's efforts, risks, and capital employed.[1]

References

  1. ^ Goldfarb, Danielle (November 23, 2009). "Making Milk: The Practices, Players, and Pressures Behind Dairy Supply Management". The Conference Board of Canada. pp. 7–16. Chapter 2. Locked. Available only to CB membership. Cited in Hall Findlay 2016:4 "The Dairy Commissioners arrive at the target price by analyzing production costs, market conditions, other stakeholder input, and what they determine is a fair return to the producers. Other factors include assessments of overall demand for milk and dairy products, and what the current production levels are."


Retail price of milk

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Moved this sentence to talk page in light of 2017 "Fresh Milk Price Report" cited in 2018 Export Action Global. The comparative list of global retail fluid milk price per litre for 12 months ending October 2017 in Canadian dollars shows that Canadian prices were lower than countries with deregulated milk markets (Canada: $1.50, Australia: $1.57, USA: rBST-free $1.61, France: $1.77, and New Zealand: $1.83.)[1]: 30 

The prices that processors and consumers pay are higher than the price on the international market.[citation needed] Those who oppose SM's import controls, say that it blocks imports in order to enable price controls.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Taylor, Adam; Anastassiades, Fion (April 2018). Are Canadian Consumers and Farmers Better Off with the Canadian Model? (PDF). Export Action Global (Report). Dairy systems around the world. p. 44. Retrieved July 25, 2018.