| Media
Contact:
Dr. Tom Vukina,
919/515-5864
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Sept.
15,
2004
NC
State Receives $465K Grant to Study Swine Marketing
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
North Carolina State University agricultural economists
have received $465,000 to study different types of
marketing arrangements in the swine and pork industries.
NC State
is a part of the consortium of researchers headed
by the Research Triangle Institute (RTI), which
received a $4.3 million contract from the U.S. Department
of Agriculture’s Grain Inspection Packers and
Stockyards Administration (GIPSA) to study livestock
and meat marketing for hogs, cattle and sheep.
Dr. Tomislav
Vukina, NC State professor of agricultural and resource
economics, says he and colleagues at NC
State – Dr. Michael Wohlgenant, William Neal
Reynolds Distinguished Professor of agricultural and
resource economics, and Dr. Nick Piggott, associate
professor of agricultural and resource economics – will
take a close look at the implications that the changing
organizational structure of the swine and pork industries
exerts on producers’ and consumers’ costs
and benefits.
The researchers
will take mounds of data collected by RTI – surveys of all those involved in livestock
and meat production and marketing, from farmers and
packers to food service firms, exporters and retailers,
as well as their individual transaction data – and
conduct various economic analyses, including:
- Identifying
and determining the use of emerging types of
marketing arrangements such as production
and marketing contracts;
- Determining terms of the marketing arrangements and
their availability to entities of different sizes and
in different geographic locations;
- Determining the long-term implications of swine marketing
arrangements on operating costs; animal and meat quality;
marketing risks; prices of livestock and meat; and
the structure of the livestock and meatpacking industries.
Vukina
says the study is important to North Carolina because
of its multibillion-dollar livestock industry.
He’s especially interested in comparing and contrasting
the North Carolina model – dominated by vertically
integrated companies which own everything involved
in producing pork and
which often contract out segments of production to
independent farmers – with the Midwestern model
in which small farms raise pigs and sell them at auctions.
“This study will give us a better understanding
of how the industry operates and how all the different
segments function,” Vukina said. “Although
there will be no policy proposals in this project,
it will provide insight about similar changes occurring
in other industrial organizations in agriculture.”
- kulikowski -
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