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Allan Barber describes where MIE are at trying to improve 'a bad system', but suspects what we have is 'the best there is'

Rural News
Allan Barber describes where MIE are at trying to improve 'a bad system', but suspects what we have is 'the best there is'

By Allan Barber

John McCarthy, Meat Industry Excellence (MIE) chairman, tells me the red meat industry plan is getting near to completion.

The initial figures will be out within about three weeks with the final written plan to follow about a month later, so we can expect to have the full output around the end of October.

MIE’s website gives a good précis of what the plan attempts to achieve and the process for getting there. It lists the two key areas of work in hand:

Firstly a survey to gauge the level of farmer understanding of processing and marketing models in NZ. We are also seeking their appetite for contracts and or longer term commitments to supply and their views on capturing more from the entire supply chain.

Secondly, MIE has engaged highly experienced industry experts to attempt to identify cost savings and/or benefits from across the entire value chain.

Critical factors or issues the plan will address are:

  • How to develop the pathways to reduce capacity?
  • Current procurement practices are a major impediment.
  • Loyalty in the Red Meat Industry is sadly lacking and restoring ‘2 way loyalty’ will be fundamental.
  • MIE is developing a road map to explain where the industry is heading over the next 10 years.
  • MIE will quantify the stark options farmers and processors face under the status quo.
  • MIE will identify how farmers can retain sufficient control of the value chain.

Meanwhile McCarthy has almost finished a round of meetings with meat company directors and executives to give them a flavour of the objectives and possible conclusions of the plan.

He assures me there has been general agreement with the concepts explored and presented as being in the industry’s best interests.

However my conversations with company executives, although not fully comprehensive, suggest there wasn’t anything specific to disagree with. There were no solid proposals to consider, such as company rationalisation or merger, which is not surprising because of the as yet incomplete programme of work.

It also seems the Plan will not be able to address the issue of introducing rationalisation into overseas marketing, because it is too complex an area beyond the initial scope or funding capacity.

Therefore procurement and processing will be the only areas covered at this stage.

This isn’t surprising because international sales and marketing is an enormously convoluted network of products, markets, contacts and customers. No single selling structure can hope to replicate this network.

Hopefully the eventual proposal will be able to resolve a very tricky problem, although it will depend entirely on whether there is a viable method of restructuring procurement and processing.

If not, the industry’s marketing will continue to resemble democracy, often characterised as a bad system of government, but still the best there is.

MIE deserves credit for its efforts to develop a more functional industry structure that meets the needs of all parties.

The hard work really starts when the plan is out for discussion.

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Allan Barber is a commentator on agribusiness, especially the meat industry, and lives in the Matakana Wine Country where he runs a boutique B&B with his wife. You can contact him by email at allan@barberstrategic.co.nz or read his blog here ». This article first appeared in Farmers Weekly and is here with permission.

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9 Comments

I hear China is importing very little meat from NZ at the moment and that includes all other agriculture products including milk.

If they don't return to the market its going to a very interesting season.

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Not just meat AJ, pelts as well. China has stopped dead importing pelts internationally causeing a slump in prices. Hopefully this is a lesson as we seem to be getting sucked head first into carcasses and 6 way cuts into China for short term gain. Once we have lost our processing capacity they will then screw us to the boards, its like watching a slow motion train wreck!

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what would China want with dead animals?   They don't wear dead things,  and many are mostly vegetarian

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They're seriously into affrodizzyacts in China ....

 

... if it's dead , they'll smoke it , snort it , turn it into tea , or sprinkle it on their noodles and private parts ...

 

We should con them into believing that dried possum is a sexual medicine , guaranteeing boy babies are conceived .... no more need for the 1080 drops ....

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developing that brand as a delicacy works - see what it did to the tigers.
Once upon a time, tigers eat people, can't afford to pay hunters to kill tigers.

Advertising tigers penis as great for fertility, now people pay money to kill tigers.  
If you said tiger steaks were good for you, the lie would be too small.

- -
But do have to be careful - in some places they offered bounty on dead pest animals.
Smart people started farming the pests for the bounty.
So government revoked the bounty.
Pest farms no longer viable so dumped their living stock in the alleyways.
Problem worse than ever
....

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... I well recall when a bunch of unwanted feral pests were dumped into a back alley in New Zealand ...

 

They re-emerged as the Greens Party .... nasty , really nasty ....

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I was actually told they are importing nothing from us.  These slow motion train wrecks can be devastating.  Looks like they intend to do all the boning for us but on the way we will get done over like with wool.

 That 75 million tonne grain stockpile in China is going to feed a lot of animals.  I was reading somewhere that tractor sales in the US are back %37. The wheat price has taken a dive. Beef is so expensive here no one eats it.

 The western consumer is spending less, consumption is collapsing enough to hurt.

Watch this clip on Japan

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRaRPMkIy-0

 

 

 BNZ are saying land prices will remain stable.

 

 

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/hawkes-bay-today/rural/news/article.cfm?c_id=…

 

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 BNZ are saying land prices will remain stable.

 

A denial is as good as a guarantee they (rural land prices) will retreat.

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the more of the production process they own the better for their factory owners, workers, and stream.

that "costs more in NZ" is our peoples wages, profits and taxes...

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