Vertical Coordination in the Pork and Broiler Industries: Implications for Pork and Chicken Products
Steve W. Martinez
Agricultural Economics Report No. (AER777) 48 pp,
April 1999
This report compares current changes in vertical coordination in the U.S. pork industry with past changes in the U.S. broiler industry. Recent changes in the structure of the U.S. pork industry reflect, in many ways, past changes in the broiler industry. Production contracts and vertical integration in the broiler industry facilitated rapid adoption of new technology, improved quality control, assured market outlets for broilers, and provided a steady flow of broilers for processing. Affordable, high-quality chicken products have contributed to continual increases in U.S. chicken consumption, which has surpassed pork and beef on a per capita basis. Incentives for contracting and vertical integration in the pork industry may yield comparable results.
Keywords: vertical coordination, vertical integration, contracts, transaction costs, technology, chicken, pork
In this report ... Chapters are
in Adobe Acrobat PDF format.
- Frontmatter(title page, contents, summary, glossary of terms), 39 Kb
- Introduction, 16 Kb
- The Role of Changing Vertical Coordination in the Broiler and Pork Industries, 71 Kb
- Application of Vertical Coordination Theories to the Broiler and Pork Industries, 52 Kb
- Relationship Between Increased Vertical Coordination, Product Prices, and Quality, 73 Kb
- Policy Responses to New Methods of Vertical Coordination, 19 Kb
- Summary and Conclusions, 20 Kb
- References, 27 Kb
- Appendix, 27 Kb
- Entire Report, 337 Kb
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Updated date: April 1, 1999
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