Agricultural Chemical Prices in Canada and the United States: A Case Study of Alberta and Montana
Date
2004-12
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
MSU Extension
Abstract
Differences in retail prices for similar or identical agricultural chemicals have been a source of controversy in the Prairie Provinces of Canada and the Northern Great Plains States of the United States since the mid-1990s. Such differences may exist because of differing pesticide regulations between the United States and Canada. Different regulations may inhibit trade between the two regions and isolate markets from one another. If this is the case, then regulatory harmonization that allows Canadian and U.S. agricultural producers to purchase agricultural chemicals in Canada or the United States would generally lead to harmonization of agricultural chemical prices.
Description
Keywords
Agronomy, Agricultural economics, Plant sciences
Citation
Policy Paper 4: Agricultural Chemical Prices in Canada and the United States: A Case Study of Alberta and Montana, Vincent H. Smith and James B. Johnson, December 2004 (Revised)