Washington, D.C., April 19,
2007 – “The strength of the livestock marketing
system in the U.S. is the flexibility it
provides to producers, packers/processors and
retailers in responding to market signals and
offering increasing variety of alternatives for
the producer through to the consumer,” said AMI
President J. Patrick Boyle today in written
testimony submitted to the Senate Committee on
Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry. Boyle
thanked the committee for the opportunity to
submit written testimony, but noted the irony
of holding a hearing on the issue of livestock
industry structure without a single meat packer
or processor present to offer verbal testimony
or respond to members’ questions. “Holding a
hearing on livestock marketing agreements
without inviting meat packers or processors to
participate is like holding a forum on
competitive bicycling without inviting Lance
Armstrong,” he said.
Boyle noted that
AMI’s support for the many forms of voluntary
marketing agreements is supported by the
findings of two recently released studies –
both mandated by Congress – which affirm AMI’s
assessment that these optional agreements are
beneficial to producers and consumers alike.
“These measures aid a livestock producer’s
ability to manage price and weather risks,
access credit, and participate in value-added,
branded product lines,” he
said.
According to Boyle, producer
options include: spot market transactions,
production contracts, cooperatives, bargaining
associations, marketing agreements, and other
choices that allow them to align themselves
with consumer demands through contractual
arrangements to manage risk and produce a
desired product. He noted that these agreements
are market driven and offer many benefits to
those who choose to use them. “We believe that
the most appropriate government role in today's
livestock marketing system is to enforce the
existing laws and regulations that ensure fair
and nondiscriminatory business practices among
producers and packers, while allowing producers
the freedom of choice on how best to market
their livestock.”
Boyle told committee
members that the many marketing options provide
producers the ability to diversify or
concentrate their livestock marketing plan to
best match their skills, experiences, capital
base, or tolerance of weather and price risks.
One of the more common reasons producers and
packers enter arrangements is to manage price
risks to aid in the access of credit and
capital, he said. “Producers and packers
recognize that managing this volatility is
critical to their long-term economic well-being
and livelihood. This is true across
agriculture, where more than 40 percent of all
agricultural goods are produced via contracts
or related agreements,” he said.
Boyle
noted that these agreements are also benefiting
consumers. For example, according to the Bureau
of Labor and Statistics, since 1984, ground
beef has consistently lagged behind the larger
consumer price index increases, thereby,
consistently improving the value returned to
consumers for their food dollar relative to all
other expenditures. Further, the amount of
income that consumers spend on all meat and
poultry products has shrunk to less than two
percent of income. “Attempts to limit packers’
and producers’ abilities to engage in
contracts, marketing agreements, and strategic
mergers reduce capacity to respond to consumers
and pursue economic, social, and environmental
goals in rural America,” he said.
Boyle
said that the recently completed four year,
$4.5 million analysis, “Livestock and Meat
Marketing Study,” – conducted by USDA in
cooperation with the Department of Justice, the
Federal Trade Commission and the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission – is the most
comprehensive and far reaching study that has
ever been conducted on livestock and meat
marketing. The report found that contractual,
marketing arrangements between livestock
producers and meat packers increase the
economic efficiency of the cattle, hog, and
lamb markets, and that these economic benefits
are distributed to consumers, as well as to
producers and packers. Conversely, the study
concluded that restrictions on the use of these
contractual arrangements, such as the
legislative proposals that I have previously
discussed, would have negative economic effects
on livestock producers, meat packers, and
consumers.
A second multi-year,
Congressionally-mandated report from the
bipartisan Antitrust Modernization Commission
was released earlier this month. It concludes
that “government should not displace free
market competition absent extensive careful
analysis and strong evidence that a market
failure requires the regulation of prices,
costs, and entry in place of competition.”
“These are but two recent studies, in a
long line of similar studies over the past
twenty years that have reached the same
conclusions about the legality and vibrancy of
the livestock marketing system,” Boyle
concluded. “And they have all – every one of
them, without exception – reached the same
conclusions as the two studies I have sighted
in my testimony: That the livestock and
meatpacking market is competitive and that
current oversight and enforcement are
effective.”
American Meat Institute Says Ban on Packer Ownership of Livestock "Detrimental to Entire Livestock Sector"
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
For more information
contact:
| David Ray Vice President, Public Affairs 202-587-4243 dray@meatami.com |
Janet Riley Sr. Vice President, Public Aff 202-587-4245 jriley@meatami.com |
