If we have sold the farm, who in hell bought it?

 

ALL those newspaper headlines and interviews on the wireless have really been getting to me.

If I only believed half of what I had read or heard, I would be expecting the hosts of Midian to be setting up camp on the farms next door.

Because, it seems, we have gone ahead and sold the farm to these rapacious overseas interests.

It had reached the stage where I was beginning to think I might have to revive the Australian Natives Association (if that’s too far back for you, thank heavens for Google) to put some spine back in our governmental system.

Just like the good old days.

Until the latest figures came out from the good old Australian Bureau of Statistics.

It seems there is 400 million hectares of farmland in Australia. I doubt that includes the Northern Territory and northern Queensland, because that’s not farming, that’s just turn ’em loose and see what you can round up a year later.

Of that 400 million, less than 14 per cent has some degree of foreign ownership.

Just some degree – not outright ownership.

And 90-plus per cent of that not-quite-14 per cent is in the hands of just a handful (on this scale, that’s about 50) companies that have invested here.

In fact, most of that land owned by pesky foreigners is in the NT (so really, who cares?) and the least is in Victoria. Anyone who lives here wouldn’t want to sell, would they?

However, the numbers that still give the old Whacker the heebie-jeebies are the world population figures.

Already we’ve hit eight billion and actually speeding up, not slowing down, it is tipped to hit 10 billion by the end of the century.

That might seem a long way away (too far for the Whacker, thank God) but crikey Christmas, at this rate I’ll soon be carving up the high country for condominiums and ghettos.

Anyhow, once the ABS released its figures, of course everyone had their take – and of course everyone was hollering at the top of their lungs that it was actually worse.

Not helped by the ABS admission its figures were sort of a guesstimate.

Because there is no super-accurate register of foreign ownership of land in this country, and even allowing for halfwits sinking their cash into the NT, it might just turn out we own less than we actually think we do.

Sort of like our farm.

We own about 12 per cent, just like the foreigners, and the bank has a tight grip on the other 88 per cent.

And for those of you who have been following the family adventures, junior has taken on finance from a foreign bank.

Which means – when push comes to shove – we are in the same boat as the rest of that land snapped up by foreigners.

We own a bit and they own a lot. Of course, as the old man always said to me, “sell ’em as much as they want, they soon learn they don’t really know how to farm here, and they can’t take the land anywhere”.

And, I can assure you, that’s got me thinking again.

First, about ever trusting junior with the farm and, second, about how to get them bloody foreigners off our farming land.

Hang on, isn’t that where we started?

Digital Editions


  • Ricegrowers backs review

    Ricegrowers backs review

    The Ricegrowers’ Association has welcomed the start of a 12‑week consultation on the Murray–Darling Basin Plan Review. RGA president Peter Herrmann said industry would take…

More News

  • Big crop predicted for almonds

    Big crop predicted for almonds

    The almond harvest is underway and 2026 could produce Australia’s largest almond crop. Nationally it’s estimated that almost 167 thousand tonnes will be harvested this year. That’s a seven per…

  • The calm before the storm

    The calm before the storm

    We appear to be bogged down in a rut, with the commissioning of our new plant. I was super frustrated a couple of months ago – at the spanner throwing,…

  • Backpacking paves the way to leadership

    Backpacking paves the way to leadership

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 531373 SUNRAYSIA’s summer harvest attracts travellers on working holidays from all over the world, particularly Europe. These workers perform a vital service for regional…

  • Warm weather set to continue

    Warm weather set to continue

    BARLEY prices are supported as drought speculation builds, with growers holding onto grain for livestock feed. The Bureau of Meteorology January drought statement showed below-average rainfall for much of Victoria…

  • Growers warn of fallout from visa cuts

    Growers warn of fallout from visa cuts

    UNPICKED crops, decimated rural communities and higher supermarket prices are among the consequences that could unfold if One Nation’s anti-immigration policy were to be implemented, farmers and experts have warned.…

  • Grape harvest underway

    Grape harvest underway

    Harvest has begun with our first loads of Chardonnay and Pinot Grigio. Reports of lower yields following the ongoing heat are common, although with the worldwide oversupply of wine, this…

  • Grant strengthens cattle and red meat industry

    Grant strengthens cattle and red meat industry

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 528596 Meat and Livestock Australia (MLA) in partnership with industry peak bodies, has secured a grant from the National Foundation for Australia-China Relations to…

  • Safety a priority

    Safety a priority

    EVERY farmer deserves to come home safely at the end of the day. That is the message at the heart of a new statewide campaign urging Victorian farmers to see…

  • Golden opportunity for future

    Golden opportunity for future

    THE Victorian Farmers Federation has called on the State Government to make strategic investments in agriculture, saying smarter policy and targeted funding in seven priority areas could supercharge the industry…

  • New initiative for soil diseases

    New initiative for soil diseases

    THE Grains Research and Development Corporation has recently launched a new initiative aimed at addressing economic strain from soilborne crop diseases. The Soil-Borne Disease Initiative is a five-year program that…