Wiens says this has created a lot of stress on the farm in terms of trying to meet the rising costs with the revenue received.
He notes there isn't a direct correlation between changes to farm gate milk prices and what consumers pay in the store.
However, Wiens gave some examples if the price increase was passed on directly to consumers.
"In a restaurant, the glass of milk through this increase would go up by one cent for a glass of milk. For a medium pizza, at a restaurant, it would increase the cost of the pizza by four cents. If you want to take that to a grocery store, for example, a 650 gram tub of yogurt would increase by about 3.7 per cent, which would be 12 cents for that tub. Another way of looking at it is, for a 450 gram package of cheddar cheese, that cost would go up by 3.6 per cent, which would be an additional 26 cents for that package of cheese."
Wiens says the price increase by the CDC is helping to put dairy farmers on even keel.
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