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  1. You can’t really blame individual farmers for the countries economic strategy. Addicting the country to selling milk powder to china can be slated home to National but what is the export income economic policy from Labour TPM Greens to fix the problem? Its still the same primary produce single buyer problem NZ had 60 years ago with Britain. And the country is still exporting commodities. A commodity export tax would incentivise value added exports.

    If farmers paid for their emmissions what are the consequences? Possibly speeded up development of fart defying cow and grass genetics. Definately lowered overseas income and sending of carbon credit money offshore affecting the balance of payments. If farmers paid an emmissions tax how likely is it that money would be strategically used to diversify the economy away from exporting to China? Zilch.

    1. AND what is the % of GDP that can be attributed to dairy these days .It used to be around 60% but now is closer to 20% as many other industries are growing .NZ is no longer a one trick pony .

  2. For clean rivers it’s not a matter of voting green you would need public protesters continually turning up at council meetings and the council enforcement officers, offices demanding a green fix. Environmentalists would have to get the general public really activated. River Keepers?

  3. Who would sympathize with the dairy industry knowing the facts? Not the rhetoric, not the spin but an understaning of the real cost of supporting the industry.

    The dairy farmers? They’re the human face of the industry of course – other than the corporate enablers at Fonterra. But who are these dairy farmers? Owner operator cow cockies struggling with a mortage, inconsistent weather, stress, god knows what. The pioneering myth leads us to believe so. Man and his hard working wife battling the land. Who wouldn’t extend a hand of support.

    But how many “dairy farmers’ are simply managers in the employment of corporate interests, neither owning the land nor the livestock?

    How many are sharemilkers, wandering tennants trying to etch out a living with the hope of owning a small farm themselves. And the rural landlords, who are these and how many are there?

  4. AND what is the % of GDP that can be attributed to dairy these days .It used to be around 60% but now is closer to 20% as many other industries are growing .NZ is no longer a one trick pony .

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