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Opinion: Ottawa tone deaf to farmers’ issues

Most of the nitrogen fertilizer in Canada is imported, and Russia has historically been the cheapest supplier for Canadian farmers.
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The author says the federal government’s handling of tariffs placed on fertilizer from Russia and Belarus is what happens when the government is driven by urban politics.

Ottawa recently announced that tariff revenues received from Canadian farmers who bought Russian-Belarusian fertilizers this year are being sent to Ukraine to rebuild infrastructure.

Canada was the only G7 country to put tariffs on Russian and/or Belarusian fertilizer after Russia invaded Ukraine in March. Of the $115 million sent to Ukraine, $34 million were collected from our own farmers who had bought Russian fertilizer, according to Statistics Canada.

Sanctions came so quickly in March that farmers couldn’t pivot and buy fertilizer from another source. They were essentially forced to pay tariffs. It’s important to note that nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are the “Big 3” primary nutrients in commercial fertilizers, and farmers will often source all three differently.

Most of the nitrogen fertilizer in Canada is imported, and Russia has historically been the cheapest supplier for our farmers. Phosphate usually comes from the United States or Morocco. Potassium, derived from potash, comes from Western Canada. Given the tariffs, nitrogen will likely be purchased from other sources next year.

Some groups, such as Ontario Grain Farmers, are now asking Ottawa to remove tariffs on fertilizer imports. That may not be advisable because many farmers have already started to plan and work around tariffs and avoid Russia altogether.

So perhaps for next year, tariffs on Russian products will work. Or will they? Sanctions should be punitive. But for tariffs on fertilizers, there was no evidence that Russian companies were affected at all. In fact, Russia’s agriculture has barely been affected by the conflict or subsequent sanctions.

Case in point: Russian agriculture experienced one of its best years overall. Another case in point: Russia is bound to be the largest wheat exporter in the world for 2022 and 2023. It begs the question if all the sanctions implemented by western countries have worked.

Over the years, the theory and research on the effectiveness of economic sanctions have been a mere exercise in running regressions on a series of random numbers. They do not shed any light to guide policy making. Most importantly, what has come out of years of research on sanction effectiveness is that success can only happen when expectations are modest at best. Sanctions are mainly about perceptions and, yes, politics. When Ottawa implemented sanctions, it made Canadians feel good about helping Ukraine, but without having to go to war. That’s what sanctions are for — nothing more, nothing less.

Russia is economically stable, whether we want to believe this or not. Its food inflation rate reached 20 per cent in April of this year, but since then, the inflation and food inflation rates have come down dramatically to 11.1 per cent in November. That almost matches those of the United States at 10.6 per cent.

Ottawa did the right thing in implementing sanctions against Russia, but some measures were either half-measures or incredibly short-sighted and did little damage to Russia.

Sanctions are powerful messages, but forcing farmers to pay more for inputs will not only jeopardize the financial viability of smaller farms in Canada but could also compromise our own food security.

This is what happens when a federal government is driven by urban politics and is tone deaf to the issues affecting agriculture. Despite its obsession to make Canadians feel good about themselves, Ottawa should never do this on the backs of our own farmers.

Sylvain Charlebois is senior director of the agri-food analytics lab and a professor in food distribution and policy at Dalhousie University. This article first appeared on the Troy Media website. It has been edited for length.

 

 

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