Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

N.Z. BUTTER IN CANADA

A Developing Market ‘ ' Wallowing in pasture grass three feet high,” as one paper recently put it, the .New Zealand .Daisy pursues an even way unruffled by the stir her contributions to the human appetite are destined to cause in a country so far away as Canada. But Daisy or Polly,.or whatever the ruling pet name is nowadays, all unwittingly contributes not a little to the political disputes as well to the housewives of this distant land of sunshine and snow, says the Auckland “Star.” Indeed, if the owners of the dairy herds that constitute Slew Zealand’s main source of wealth wore to hear the leading politicians of Canada turning a battery of condemnation upon the favourable terms under which their produce enters this country, or else hear of them indulge in an equally hearty defence of those terms—'they would. be surer than ever that they are the backbone of the Dominion.

Nor are the politicians the only ones to' give attention to New Zealand but ter. Leading newspapers find tho question for its almost duty free admission a subject- for dismay or approval, according to their views of the big principle of free trade or protection, which is really behind all the controversy. The Hon. B. B. Bennett, leader of the Dominion Opposition, is particularly loud in condemning the way the importation is encouraged under the reciprocal tariff arrangement with New Zealand and Australia, and one night the writer heard him devote as much as half an hour to a violent tirade against the Government that had agreed to its farmers being exposed to “this most unfair competition from a lend that knows no winter and where the cows suffer no ill effects from climate although they never have to be sheltered or band fed.”

“Ruinous Competition.” 1 ‘ Ruinous competition ’ ’ was the way the “Halifax Herald” described the importations from New Zealand the other day following a shipment to Nova Scotia port. To this the “Manitoba Dree Press,” the most influential journal in Western Canada, with an enormous following in the agricultural community makes some pertinent rejoinders. “We wonder if one reason for the importing of butter is that the Maritimes do not produce enough for their own market,” it remarks editorially.

And that seems to be the crux of the whole position. Canada at present is not producing enough butter for her own consumption, and so long as this position of 'dependency lasts so long, it is reasonable to suppose, New Zealand and Australia will be able to find a market for a portion of the surplus in this great Dominion. Those experts who have studied the problem have discovered that the average wheat grower does not make a good dairyman when he tries his- hand at what often seems to him as easy money. The agricultural editor of the “Montreal Gazette,” reviewing the butter situation recently, attributed the decrease in exports in summer and imports in the winter to an increase in the home consumption and not to any falling away ir. the production. He offers the opinion that production has not declined on account of the importations.

Growing Canada. Dr. J. E. Euddick, Commissioner of tho Federal Dairy Branch, has made observations on similar lines, and he has also said that the dairy outlook for Canada was never brighter. The fact is that the country is growing rapidly Immigrants are coming in every year in their hundreds of thousands, and it is quesionable if, even had Canada a winter climate more conducive I to dairy production, the f armers could j keep pace with, the demand if left to j their own resources. But tho climate! is the real obstacle to production, and | i* should ensure that the Dominion is always a good customer for butter selling at reasonable rates. The prairie farmer, forced to house and hand-feed his cows for about four months in the year, cannot hope to compote on a I price basis with Australia and bow Zealand, even if he has paid only a tenth of the price for his land that the Antipodean dairyman has paid. Nature, is against him, and the city housewife will be against him too should his influence be sufficient to raise the import duty on butter, but there seems little fear of such an increase at present. The West, where the farmers are in their biggest numbers, is “free trade” on principle, and the farmers are not worrying so much about the

butter tariff now as they were a year ago. They have found that it does not mean ruin after all. In view of the tremendous expansion at present taking place in Canada tho potentialities of the market for New Zealand butter and fruit . should be kept well in view by the interests on the other side. Favoured climatically and seasonally New Zealand is in the box seat when it comes to supplying the winter difference between what the Canadians eat and what they can provide themselves. The product is good and the Canadians will eat it so long as it is buyable at the ruling world rates. Give it to them.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MT19290223.2.97.1

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Times, Volume LIV, Issue 6844, 23 February 1929, Page 12

Word Count
860

N.Z. BUTTER IN CANADA Manawatu Times, Volume LIV, Issue 6844, 23 February 1929, Page 12

N.Z. BUTTER IN CANADA Manawatu Times, Volume LIV, Issue 6844, 23 February 1929, Page 12