Thursday, 12 December 2013

Barnaby's Blueprint

Barnaby Joyce is keen to leave his mark on Australian agriculture and so has initiated his review of competitiveness of the sector.  While there can be doubts as to the wisdom of another review, there is no doubting that Mr Joyce has a passion for Australian agriculture and a strong vision for what the sector can become. 

The scope of the white paper and the background information does give an insight into the thinking of the Minister and the Government more widely.  This is a clear focus on improving returns at the farm gate and achieving fair returns through the value chain.  The fact that improving returns to farmers is a key objective of the process is encouraging. 

The other terms of reference are also important.  The need to improve skills and training is explicitly acknowledged.  The need to improve the regulatory environment for primary producers is also considered.  Market access, the capital requirements of the sector and the contribution of agriculture to regional economies are also important topics which will be considered.  The involvement of the Prime Minister is also encouraging and shows the industry is being taken seriously at the highest level. 

The process announced by the Minister has been criticised by many as being just another review.  The previous Government developed their own “Food Plan” last year.  Let’s face it no-one was ever going to take seriously a plan for agriculture from the previous Government who were content to shut down the northern cattle industry to satisfy a noisy minority. 

A key element of the vision from Barnaby Joyce is development of agriculture in northern Australia.  The north of Australia does indeed have great potential to expand and contribute significantly to the goal of doubling agricultural output.  Generally the rhetoric from politicians is never matched by actions when it comes to developing the north.  It remains to be seen whether this flurry of activity will be any different. 
The Government does not need to wait for the results of the review to take action.  There are a number of key areas where action can be undertaken immediately such as continuing to secure free trade agreements, investing in infrastructure and reducing red tape. 

There is little doubt that Australian agriculture can expand significantly and can meet the objective of doubling production by 2050.  The role of all three levels of Government is to create an environment which encourages this growth.  This means there is plenty of fodder for future blog posts.  


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