Archive for the ‘Agribusiness’ Category

Where has the heat and light gone?


There are occasions when commenting on the current state of the meat industry you might as well skim through one of the many recent company or industry histories. It is déjà vu all over again.

With just about any development or proposal you can flick through the history pages and find an instance to enable you to say that the industry has “been there, done that”.  And almost invariably the outcome was that unless it was something proposed or introduced by one or more meat companies it did not stick.  It has to be their idea; its part of their management style. So they haven’t got the T shirt.

So, much of the action from the Meat Industry Excellence group which generated a lot of heat and light in the media a few weeks ago has happened before (several times in the last 40 odd years) in both the meat and the wool industry.

And if history is anything to go by, the heat will cool and the light will grow dim, particularly if the saga drags on. There could be some marginal adjustments, so the stirrers can claim they had achieved some of the changes they were aiming for. In some instances the radical conservatives will weigh in and vote for the retention of the status quo.

Generally the causes for slow or no change have been either one, or a combination of the following: the inbuilt inertia of the current structure, the recognition by those advocating change that altering the established system is a daunting prospect, or farm gate prices begin to improve. As result the pressure for change diminishes, until the next time.

Those engaged in the industry have a vested interest in protecting their own organisation and their position in it, so any industry restructuring moves by the companies are likely to be marginal and slow. As economist John Kenneth Galbraith stated, “Faced with the choice between changing one’s mind and proving that there is no need to do so, almost everyone gets busy on the proof.” It is always easier to show that change is not really necessary.

There have been reports about four major meat companies discussing possible adjustments to improve the industry performance. It is likely that the deliberations are centred on possible collabaration relating to livestock supply and/or processing; after all they are production oriented managers. Marketing collaboration is usually left out in the cold, when it should be to the forefront.

But the resounding silence about the form, content or outcome of these discussions speaks volumes. It is difficult therefore to know whether they are making progress or just stalling for time. A cynic would suggest that if the meat companies can drag the discussions on long enough the new season will be upon them with attention swinging on to different and possibly more urgent issues.

The Meat Industry Excellence group has backed away from their original agenda for a united processing and marketing structure, and their stated aims now read like a wish list largely being left to the companies to implement, rather than an action plan.

Perhaps the MIE have discovered that changing a monolith is a tough ask. Some of the original aims might have required some form of regulation but there is little or no appetite for such interventionist activity these days, so it will have to be persuasion which takes time, and that is in short supply.

Looking at it from the outside there not a lot of urgency, and there is no inspirational or even evangelical leader standing up to lead the charge and beard the meat companies. So anything that happens is likely to be the result of a long winded process and the results could be minor and cosmetic.

To add to these woes some industry commentators are now talking about an improvement in prices for the coming season as a result of shortages from the drought and because of a drop in value of the NZ dollar. There are also suggestions of a lower lamb kill, so there are likely to be shortages in markets that have been diligently developed over the recent past. Will this put upward pressure on prices, again?

If this happens then the momentum for change that has been building will quickly and quietly dissipate. The meat companies will sail on their merry way and everything will be forgotten until next time; just as they have done several times in the past.

Collaboration continuum


This could be construed as shutting the stable door after the horse is five furlongs down the track but I have a couple of concerns about the “Collaboration for Sustainable Growth” (CSG) programme.

The programme received a symbolic seal of approval when farmers agreed in March that Beef & Lamb NZ could dip into reserve funds to contribute the producers’ share of the cost of the scheme.

The CSG is explained on the Beef and Lamb NZ website as follows: “A group of agribusinesses and the government have partnered up to invest in a collaborative programme to drive sustainable, long-terms profits for New Zealand’s red meat sector. All partners plan to work together to support the adoption of best practice behind the farm gate, and between the farm and processor.”

My concerns are that in order to achieve “long term profits for the red meat sector” all of the emphasis is on the producer end of the supply chain. The focus for improvement in productivity is still behind the farm gate with the presumption that farmers have been neglecting their duty to drive for profits in the red meat sector.

For my money, the farmers have done an amazing job of improving on-farm productivity and keeping the red meat sector going in the face of fluctuating weather conditions, inconsistent prices and returns, unfavourable exchange rates, opportunist selling activities, and pressure from bankers and other advisors to convert to dairying or some other capital intensive pursuit. The inconsistency in wool returns and the demise of wool promotion and R&D have not helped, but that is another story.

Despite these adverse conditions, the productivity of the average sheep and beef farm has continued to improve, as shown by the 83% increase in the weight of lamb produced per ewe over the last 20 years. Admittedly sheep numbers have declined but that cannot be entirely related to unproductive farming practices.

In order to achieve the continuous increase in productivity, and despite the fact that they are all operating in a competitive environment, farmers have been quietly collaborating and sharing information on most aspects of best practice behind the farm gate.

Back in the day (as the saying goes these days) the Department of Agriculture used to employ sheep, wool and beef advisors to keep farmers up to date with developments in science and technology that would assist in improving productivity. In this age of self help and private enterprise these officers have gone the way of most MPI services.

Farmers have relied on their own resources, farm discussion groups, field days and just plain sharing of information, which has continued with or without assistance from government agencies. Beef & Lamb NZ have been contributing as part of their farmer funded activities, using current income derived from levies, but now they are going to dip into the reserves.

In essence the farmers have been getting on with information gathering and sharing to maintain a steady improvement in productivity for the past twenty years.

But now the various meat companies and agribusiness groups associated with the PGP schemes have the temerity to propose that farmers spend some of their reserve fund, via B&LNZ, to encourage them to continue to get together to collaborate and share information to keep improving their productivity. It is as if the farmers are the root cause of the problems of the industry.

When did the meat companies or the banks last get together and share information to improve productivity? Will they be using reserve funds or current income to fund their contributions to the CSG?

The outstanding feature of the various PGP projects that have been announced so far is that they have been proposed by individual companies, and there is a strong hint that any benefits derived will be held fairly close to the chest of the company at the centre of the particular scheme. The idea of information sharing to improve the productivity of the processing and marketing sectors is an anathema to them. Collaboration among processing companies has never been their strong suit.

While the four major meat companies claim they have been meeting to discuss possible structural changes for the future meat industry there is little evidence so far of them sharing any of this information with the other stakeholders involved – the farmers.

Farmers react to incentives and the best one is consistent pricing. Not the run away boom followed by three years of austerity while the companies and the banks recover from their excesses. So maybe there should be a move to encourage the companies to collaborate to improve their market intelligence and marketing efficiency.

P.S. I have deliberately ignored the word ‘sustainable’ since I consider it is just another multi-syllable word that has become fashionable, and can mean what I say that it means.

Farmer Payouts or Dividends


Why am I not surprised that the surge in Fonterra’s earnings has resulted in an increase in the milk price and no adjustment to the expected full year dividend to external investors.
There was always going to be this conflict of interests for the company between maintaining optimal payments to their farmer suppliers and providing what is considered to be a reasonable return to investors.
Given the history and culture of the dairy industry, based as it is on the co-operative model, the company’s interests will generally be directed first towards ensuring the supplier shareholders receive optimal returns which reflect the state of the market, but also to ensure continuity of supply.
Directors are required to act in the best interests of the company, so supplier based enterprises such as Fonterra, or meat companies, have to balance the needs of their investors (and bankers) against those of their shareholder suppliers.
This dichotomy continually arose when Freesia Investments held shares in meat companies, but it was more pronounced with the shareholding in co-operative companies. If the market was down farmer directors argued for all available funds to be put into product payments, while any surplus generated by improvements in market returns were needed to boost the year end payouts, to engender as much farmer supplier loyalty as possible.
The Fonterra external investors should consider themselves lucky; they can at least expect to receive a dividend. Freesia came behind the farmer shareholders and the banks, and the cupboard was bare.

Update


I  notice it is getting on for 12 months since I last posted any ramblings, which means I have been fluffing about trying to decide where I go to now.

I finished the Copy Editing and Proofreading course and started seeking work with all the enthusiasm of a naive greenhorn. However I quickly found there was a dearth of reasonably paid work for someone who does not have a track record. And with the tight economic conditions there were any number of job seekers prepared to work for what I regard as a pittance. as I am not relying on such editing as a regular source of income the paucity of work coming my way does not bother me to much; I can always go and play golf.

We are in the lead up phase to this year’s budget presentation from the Minister of Finance and we have been assailed by dire predictions of the state of the government accounts and the mounting level of government debt. This is no doubt designed to soften us up for another push to persuade us of the need for a partial sale of state owned assets. But, other than a rather facile debt reduction argument, there has been no convincing presentation of the rationale behind this proposal. The cynic in me suggests that the proposed sales are purely a means for the National party supporters to get their hands on these assets to screw more money out of the long suffering Kiwi taxpayers. No one has shown how we benefited from the last state sell off; so how will the current proposal be any better?

First the bad news


The National party seems to be softening us up for the budget next week; all the attention is focussed on the deficit, which is about 8% of GDP (apparently 6% would be better) and the level of Government borrowing which is reported as being some $350 million per week. I wonder whether this is a gross figure or net after loan repayments. I suspect it is the gross figure; the aim being to make it sound as bad as possible so we start agreeing that “something needs to be done”.

And right on time, the IMF brings out a report which suggests NZ is living beyond its means and needs to consider policies to limit its borrowing requirements. Strangely for the IMF (tongue firmly in cheek) they suggest the Government should consider selling off some of its assets. Do I detect the dead hand of Treasury behind all this?

One would have thought they might have reconsidered the efficacy of this policy after the disastrous asset sales programme and the giveaway prices achieved when Roger Douglas ruled the roost. Perhaps they should read “The Gods that Failed” by Larry Elliott and Dan Atkinson, which according to the web site http://www.thegodsthatfailed.co.uk advises that the authors “argue that we need a new system: instead of an increasingly risk-prone, privatised, profit-driven economic model overseen by a largely unaccountable and speculation-obsessed elite, we need an economy that is run and regulated in the interests of ordinary people.”

Memoirs of a Fieldays Virgin


It was my first visit to Fieldays this year; an event that has been educating, entertaining, enthralling or completely enveloping farmers for 42 years at Mystery Creek, Waikato – and I had never been near the place.
Of course I had been told by previous attendees that it would blow me away as it was so big and all encompassing. I have to admit that even the size of the No 1 car park was quite intimidating, especially as there were few geographical features to provide a point of reference for finding your car at the end of the day.
As I crested the brow of the hill from the car park I was suitably impressed; the display area was bigger than I had imagined, and I was only looking down at the agricultural machinery section, and across to the Mystery Creek pavilion. It was a bit like flying across Australia – it just kept on going.
I could see that the site extended well beyond my initial purview, but it was too much to take in without actually walking the walk.
As I had no particular interest – I was not in the market for any agricultural, horticultural or even kitchen gadgets – I decided to adopt the random walk approach to viewing the exhibits. I started in the agricultural machinery section and my first conclusion was that Fieldays is an exhibition of boys’ toys for farmers, a “farmers’ market” in the true sense of the term.
Tractors, excavators, cow bails, milking equipment, irrigation systems, saw mills, and utes by the score – you name it and it was probably there in one form or another. So I roamed the site from the Innovation Center to the fencing area, then ventured into the Rural Living area.
Here there seemed to be everything for improving living on or traveling away from the farm, including slicers and dicers, cleaners and gleaners as well as massages, aromatherapy and all sorts of remedies for coughs, colds, sore holes and pimples on the bum.
After four hours I decided that my golf training of eighteen holes, twice a week had paid off, but I was in need of some form of rest. I had noted early on that there were seats arranged for spectators to watch the Tractor pulling – so I made my way there.
Tractor pulling – now there is a term to brighten the eye of every petrol or diesel head of the farming world. It obviously has all the usual jargon associated with an esoteric pastime, and the announcers kept spouting it forth with some repetition so there was an opportunity to become familiar with at least some of the finer points of the ‘sport’.
Tractors have come a long way since my early introduction to a single cylinder Lanz Bulldog; they have enclosed cabs, with more bells and whistles than the modern cell phone, and they probably come with one of those as a standard feature.
I could understand the races between two matched machines dragging sledges with similar weights over the measured one hundred meters, but the more intriguing competition was that in which the tractors pulled a machine combination of a tractor and sledges that provided increased drag resistance as a function of the distance traveled.
There were contests for standard and for custom built or modified and some extremely modified, with emphasis on the right tire pressure, gear selection, and use of a weight transfer system.
What intrigued me most however was the alacrity with which the track was leveled and grubbed after each contest to return it to simulate a ploughed paddock. It must have been the most cultivated strip of dirt in the whole area. All very educational for a foot weary shiny arse.
Fieldays – it’s an experience, but I think the first visit will also be my last; once is enough of any good thing.

Starting Over


I have been thinking about reorganising my blog posting activities to take account of the changes in my aspirations. This is in part occasioned by a discussion at a recent reunion when I was challenged to start something that would allow retired or semi retired practitioners in the agribusiness field to have a rant about topics of interest of issues that were getting up their noses. As I am resident in New Zealand the posts will obviously be more related to kiwi agriculture and its participants.

So this is it. I am not sure about the Title for the blog, but it will do in the meantime.

As for the future content; this will depend on what irks me from time to time, and the itch is sufficient to make me get off my high horse and actually commit something to print. Of course I am open to contributions from anyone else who is sufficiently motivated. Leave a comment with an email address and I will contact you.

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