Multi-plant Coordination in the US Beef Packing Industry

Date
2022-02
Authors
Pudenz, Christopher C.
Schulz, Lee
Schulz, Lee L.
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Schulz, Lee
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Economics
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Center for Agricultural and Rural DevelopmentEconomics
Abstract
U.S. beef packers openly began employing multi-plant coordination during the last decade. Using the Salop Circular City framework, we demonstrate that this leads to wider spreads between downstream beef prices and upstream fed cattle prices. Taken together with market concentration, geography and transportation costs, alternative marketing arrangements, and cattle cycles and related beef packer capacity utilization, multi-plant coordination helps explain farm-to-wholesale beef price spreads that have remained wide absent any obvious market shocks. We find that, as cattle inventories decline, a multi-plant coordinator will permanently shut down a plant before a plant run as an individual profit center will shut down, which is consistent with packer behavior over the last 20 years. We further demonstrate that adding a strategically-located packing plant, owned by a different firm, can narrow the price spread. Our results add new underpinnings to discussions that have often bordered on being repetitive in scope and in policy prescriptions.
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beef cattle, cattle cycles, farm-to-wholesale price spread, livestock economics, market concentration, multi-plant coordination, packers, policy
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