The rural community responds to change - the establishment of a co-operative venture
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Authors
Date
1986
Type
Monograph
Fields of Research
Abstract
The end of the 1984/85 meat processing season saw
the withdrawal of Supplementary Minimum Price payments,
while at the same time sheep farmers faced increased
killing charges and steadily increasing farm working costs
and overhead expenses.
The pastoral farmers had responded magnificently
to the various Government incentives to increase production,
but the meat exporting companies had been unable to find
sufficient markets to absorb the extra mutton production
at a price which would return a profit to the producer
within the cost structure of the domestic processing and
transport industries. The widespread concern about the likely consequences
of such depressed returns for mutton resulted in a series
of public meetings being called in October 1985, under the
auspices of the Amberley, Amuri, Cheviot, Hawarden, Omihi
and Sefton branches of North Canterbury Federated Farmers. At the public meetings, Mr Andrew Anderson, a farmer
with engineering training and a background associated with
meat processing technology, proposed that the farmers
should establish their own slaughtering and rendering
facility in order to dispose of their surplus sheep,
especially those ewes which would not bring a positive
return from the existing meat processing works.
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