Turning back the clock
Landcorp became a state-owned enterprise in 1987 as part of the fourth Labour Government’s massive economic transformation.
Deputy Prime Minister Bill English says more needs to be done to get young people off the dole.
English says while the Government has been addressing the problem by working with the agriculture sector, there are still too many on the welfare roll.
He told Rural News the Government was getting more young New Zealanders to the starting line with higher achievement levels.
"This is being achieved because we are measuring that at schools.
"We are then working with industry to achieve a clearer pathway into further training and into work. We now have the lowest number of young people not in education, employment or training. However, there still too many (unemployed young people) on our welfare rolls."
English was elaborating on comments he made at a recent Federated Farmers meeting about beneficiaries reluctant to work.
The comments, recorded by a Labour MP present at the meeting, quoted him saying many people seeking jobs through the Ministry of Social Development did not show up or stay with the job.
"A lot of the Kiwis that are meant to be available [for farm work] are pretty damned hopeless. They won't show up. You can't rely on them," he said.
"But we can't leave that problem unsolved, which is in the long run your problem as well as ours," he told farmers.
English told Rural News the Government would work individually with them so they are able to do work.
English may raise the issue at this month's DairyNZ Farmers Forum in Hamilton, where he is a headline speaker.
He is expected to tell about 700 farmers to readjust, stick with your banks and keep supporting your dairy company; things will come right.
"They're in a tough patch lasting longer than people expected but they are adapting pretty well in the short term," he says
"We see an industry doing the things they need to do; farmers are not just sitting around complaining. Dairy farmers are addressing problems in cost structures... and so far have convinced their financiers to back them."
The Government shares the industry's confidence in its long term future. Dairying will bounce back, he says.
"There are bound to be farmers who have to make short term decisions under a bit of pressure.
"We would expect that when the industry has had a good run for so long there would be a build of costs and debt.
"As long as they readjust and the banks stick with them and they continue to support their dairy company, we think it will come right. We think they will be there to benefit when it comes right."
The Government is keen to see farmers and banks stick together; they have good reasons to do so.
"The farmers can see a long term future and they need to persuade the banks they will be profitable customers in the future," says English.
"The banks' interest is that they don't act in a way that reduces equity in farms to the point where it represents a risk to the debt."
The Government checks in with banks regularly about their view of the dairy industry; banks are seen by the Government as cautious but positive.
While the District Field Days brought with it a welcome dose of sunshine, it also attracted a significant cohort of sitting members from the Beehive – as one might expect in an election year.
Irish Minister of State of Agriculture, Noel Grealish was in New Zealand recently for an official visit.
While not all sibling rivalries come to blows, one headline event at the recent New Zealand Rural Games held in Palmerston North certainly did, when reigning World Champion Jack Jordan was denied the opportunity of defending his world title in Europe later this year, after being beaten by his big brother’s superior axle blows, at the Stihl Timbersports Nationals.
AgriZeroNZ has invested $5.1 million in Australian company Rumin8 to accelerate development of its methane-reducing products for cattle and bring them to New Zealand.
Farmers want more direct, accurate information about both fuel and fertiliser supply.
A bull on a freight plane sounds like the start of a joke, but for Ian Bryant, it is a fond memory of days gone by.

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