That’s income for the Government in tax take, which gives us the public services we rely on, like our schools, our hospitals, and our roads.
We received a cheeky thank you from an MP at our Farmers Forum recently for the extra addition to their tax coffers this year, as the sector delivers well for the country.
New Zealand’s economic recovery is being led out of the regions, by the 360,000 people working in the primary sector, of which 50,000 work in dairy, in a country of over 5 million.
That’s been the case before, and it’ll be the case again.
New Zealand dairy farmers have tackled challenges head-on over the past decade, including biosecurity incursions, more extreme weather events and regulatory uncertainty.
Over the past decade, too, significant strides have been made in reducing environmental footprint to ensure we remain competitive among the most sustainable and low-emissions farmers on the planet.
DairyNZ chairwoman Tracy Brown. Photo / DairyNZ
All of this equals demand for New Zealand dairy on the world stage.
It also ensures we benefit from a growing global appetite for more natural and nutritional food and fibre that comes from responsible sources.
I recall it wasn’t that long ago that butter was very unfashionable and deemed unhealthy.
So it follows that the swing back to more natural products has driven increased demand and a subsequent increase in price.
While the world shouts for our butter, let’s remind ourselves at home of the reasons why New Zealand dairy is a world-class exemplar and so in demand:
We export most of what we produce, so we are exposed to world trade and must be customer-focused.
We are primarily family businesses and farmer-owned cooperatives - and that drives values-led innovation
We have a temperate climate where we grow pasture well, and that is the ultimate starting point for this story
We are unsubsidised. We have to make a living at world prices, competing against the best
Therefore, our pasture-based dairy farming system delivers highly nutritious milk, with a comparably low environmental footprint, and happy cows who graze outdoors.