TheBigShort
Registered User
- Messages
- 2,789
If they have to bailed out next year, and the year after that is that not just state aid?
Should the costs not be integrated as part of the cost of doing business. If it's not that common, I have to get insurance against adverse events in my business. Do farmers not have the same requirements.
One of the main reasons for farming subsidies is our expectation of low food costs.
Farmers cannot sell their products for an economically viable price.
Taking out insurance does not protect against stock dying or becoming diseased, this is the underlying threat to the sector.
But the underlying principle is that all businesses should anticipate recurring problems and bad years and plan accordingly.
They should not run their business on the grounds that they make money when things go well but get bailed out by the taxpayer when things go badly for them.
But the underlying principle is that all businesses should anticipate recurring problems and bad years and plan accordingly.
They should not run their business on the grounds that they make money when things go well but get bailed out by the taxpayer when things go badly for them.
No, Farmers cannot produce their products for an economically viable price.
The solution to that it to make their sector more efficient.
It is not to continue to funnel vast amounts of money into the sector so that we can produce food at artificially deflated prices and depress world market, causing widespread suffering, hunger and death in other parts of the world.
No, Farmers cannot produce their products for an economically viable price.
The solution to that it to make their sector more efficient.
It is not to continue to funnel vast amounts of money into the sector so that we can produce food at artificially deflated prices and depress world market, causing widespread suffering, hunger and death in other parts of the world.
If that happened to a manufacturing company in the export sector it would probably be against the law to support them. The downturn in the oil sector took a lot of people by surprise and hit many Irish manufacturing companies hard. Not one cent was available to support them or help them maintain employment. The double standard is hard to take. I think that if farmers put as much energy into sorting out their sector as they do whinging and begging they might be better off in the long run.Its not a case of 'things going badly' for them. The sector is being affected by adverse weather conditions that no-one can predict from one to the next the extent of the impact on the industry.
If Temple Bar is washed out with severe flooding tomorrow that puts retailers out of business for three months, do you think the retailers should stand or fall on there own two feet, or do you think that there could be scope for emergency funding, first through financial assistance and then secondly, through financing flood defenses? Who would pay for the flood defenses? The same people who are paying for the emergency supplies of fodder I would imagine? Or would that be wrong?
If that happened to a manufacturing company in the export sector it would probably be against the law to support them. The downturn in the oil sector took a lot of people by surprise and hit many Irish manufacturing companies hard. Not one cent was available to support them or help them maintain employment. The double standard is hard to take. I think that if farmers put as much energy into sorting out their sector as they do whinging and begging they might be better off in the long run.
Are you saying that every country in the world would gang up on us and stop selling us food?[
Is the problem with that however, that effectively we will be reliant on food imports? In which case, a national strategically important sector will be outsourced to other countries which could then, as some point, hold undue leverage over our other interests?
In a trade war, I wouldn't fancy our chances if we placed tariffs on Ryanair flights to Ireland over tariffs being imposed on our food imports.
Without fuel and trucks etc we couldn't farm on a commercial basis. Without EU subsidies we'd have no farming either. The notion that we are somehow food independent is fanciful.I think the fundamental difference is that food is essential. Without it we will all die. Without manufacturing we can still survive with food.
Without fuel and trucks etc we couldn't farm on a commercial basis. Without EU subsidies we'd have no farming either. The notion that we are somehow food independent is fanciful.
The sector is being affected by adverse weather conditions that no-one can predict from one to the next the extent of the impact on the industry.
do you think that there could be scope for emergency funding, first through financial assistance and then secondly, through financing flood defenses? Who would pay for the flood defenses?
Apparently, they have known about it since last September.
And bad weather is a feature of farming, just as good weather is.
In times of plenty, they should put something aside for the bad times.
These guys have very valuable assets in their farms, and taxpayers, most of whom are much poorer, are subsidising them.
I don't think that people who bought houses in housing estates with a name like "River view" should get any government assistance when their homes inevitably flood.
Not sure about Temple Bar.
If it gets flooded regularly, then, no they should not get emergency funding. If they or anyone else is hit by a once in a 100 year event, which was not insurable against, then I would not have a problem contributing to the cost.
Plenty of people in the private sector sit beside other people who are better paid than they are for doing exactly the same thing. The only difference being that the better paid person negotiated his/her contract during the period up to 2008.
If two people are doing the same job, with the same output, and one is getting €30,000 the other €35,000 then fair play to one who has negotiated €35,000. But realistically all that means is that the €30,000 employee is feasibly worth an extra €5,000.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?