menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

Why is Canada paying for dairy ‘losses’ during a boom?

8 0
16.12.2025

Canadians are told dairy farmers need protection. The newest numbers tell a different story

Interview requests

Every once in a while, someone inside a tightly protected system decides to say the quiet part out loud. That is what Joel Fox, a dairy farmer from the Trenton, Ont., area, did recently in the Ontario Farmer newspaper.

In a candid open letter, Fox questioned why established dairy farmers like himself continue to receive increasingly large government payouts, even though the sector is not shrinking but expanding. For readers less familiar with the system, supply management is the federal framework that controls dairy production through quotas and sets minimum prices to stabilize farmer income.

His piece, titled “We continue to privatize gains, socialize losses,” did not come from an economist or a critic of supply management. It came from someone who benefits from it. Yet his message was unmistakable: the numbers no longer add up.

Fox’s letter marks something we have not seen in years, a rare moment of internal dissent from a system that usually speaks with one voice. It is the first meaningful crack since the viral milk-dumping video by Ontario dairy farmer Jerry Huigen, who filmed himself being forced to dump thousands of litres of perfectly good milk because of quota rules. Huigen’s video exposed contradictions inside supply management, but the system quickly closed ranks until now. Fox has reopened a conversation that has been dormant for far too long.

Quota is up, production is up, and farm wealth is climbing. And Canadians are on the hook.
Photo by Austin Santaniello

It’s time to end Canada’s protectionist supply management regime

Our dairy addiction is turning Canada into a trade pariah

© Troy Media