FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 4, 2009
TORONTO – Consumers won’t be getting any relief from high dairy prices next year.
The Canadian Dairy Commission (CDC) announced today there will be no change to the price of industrial milk in 2010, even though dairy production costs fell by nearly 2% this year.
The price of industrial milk – used to make cheese, butter, ice cream and yogurt – has skyrocketed by 60% over the past 15 years, or twice the rate of inflation, making Canadian dairy prices among the highest in the world.
“The decision by the CDC to keep dairy prices artificially high does nothing to reverse a long-term trend of falling demand for dairy products. The CDC is pricing dairy right off our menus,” says Garth Whyte, President and CEO of the Canadian Restaurant and Foodservices Association (CRFA). "Year after year the CDC forces Canadians to swallow price increases when production costs go up, but they refuse to pass along the savings when production costs go down."
CRFA and restaurant industry leaders appeared before the commission last week to argue for a reduction in the price of industrial milk. They delivered three messages to the CDC:
CRFA is one of Canada's largest business associations, with 33,000 members representing restaurants, bars, caterers, institutions and other foodservice providers. The foodservice industry directly employs more than one million people across Canada.
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