4.5 Article

Reforming Canada's dairy supply management scheme and the consequences for international trade

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cjag.12305

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Based on the findings, Canada has the potential to become a major exporter of dairy products and benefit from free trade if supply management is eliminated. However, under a high-cost scenario, producers earn less and only domestic consumers benefit from lower prices.
Following Carter and Merel (2016), we explore the export benefits of reforming supply management (SM) in Canada's dairy sector. A trade model with ten regions and five dairy product categories is developed and used to examine the potential benefits of opening international markets to Canadian dairy products. In addition to a baseline, three scenarios are compared-one with SM in place but with Canada able to export freely. Two other scenarios assume SM is eliminated and there is complete free trade, but with high- and low-cost structures. Findings indicate that, in the high-cost scenario, domestic consumers gain from lower prices as the domestic supply and exports fall compared to the status quo, but producers are less well off. However, under a low domestic cost structure, Canada becomes a major exporter of milk, with both producers and consumers gaining from free trade. This scenario assumes that domestic producers take advantage of economies of scale, enabling them to compete in international markets. Appropriate policies will be required to reform the quota regime, while minimizing the harm done to dairy farmers.

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