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Darren Hudson, Parr Rosson, and Flynn Adcock, Mississippi State University and

Of Border Closings and BSE: North American Beef/Cattle Market Integration Presentation for the SAEA Organized Symposium: The Impacts of Globalization on Southern Agriculture. Darren Hudson, Parr Rosson, and Flynn Adcock, Mississippi State University and Texas A&M University

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Darren Hudson, Parr Rosson, and Flynn Adcock, Mississippi State University and

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  1. Of Border Closings and BSE:North American Beef/Cattle Market IntegrationPresentation for theSAEA Organized Symposium:The Impacts of Globalizationon Southern Agriculture Darren Hudson, Parr Rosson, and Flynn Adcock, Mississippi State University and Texas A&M University Prepared for the SAEA Annual Meetings Mobile, AL February 5, 2007

  2. Overview • The Growing Integration of the North American Beef and Cattle • BSE – Canada and the United States • Summary and Implications

  3. Market Integration • Harmonization of Border Regulations & Stability of Investment Rules • Increased Trade • Increased Investment • Leads to Price Convergence (NAFTA) • Hogs/Pork, .86 • Beef/Cattle, .60 • Chicken, .26 • Regulatory Integration (including SPS)FacilitatesMarket Integration ERS, USDA

  4. The Evolving North American Beef Supply Chain • CUSTA and NAFTA Have Led to Greater N.A. Trade in Beef and Cattle • Mexico Supplier of Feeders to U.S., U.S. Returns Beef • Canada Supplier of Cattle and Beef to U.S. – “No Difference in U.S. or Canadian Steer” • Greater Integration of Other Resources (Capital, Technology, Grains) Has Also Occurred • A North American Beef Complex Resulted

  5. Integration in the North American Cattle and Beef Industry, 2002 $1.1 Billion, 1.7 Million Head of Beef Cattle $1.1 Billion, 392,000 Metric Tons of Beef $283 Million, 76,000 Met. Tons of Beef $50 Million, 134,000 Head of Beef Cattle $218 Million, 67,000 Metric Tons of Beef $75 Million, 105,000 Head of Beef Cattle $592 Million, 206,000 Metric Tons of Beef $301 Million, 816,000 Head of Beef Cattle $23 Million, 6,000 Metric Tons of Beef

  6. BSE and the North American Beef Supply Chain • BSE Discovered in Canada in June 2003 and in the United States in December 2003 • Canada’s Industry Highly Export Dependent and Severely Hurt when U.S. Closed Border • U.S. Industry Less Export Dependent and Suffered Brief Downward Price Impact • 2 Year Prohibition of Canadian Live Cattle Shipments Led to Upward Price Pressure in U.S. • Mexico Speedy Resumption of Beef Imports from U.S. and Increase in Feeder Exports to U.S.

  7. The North American Beef Supply Chain: Comments • BSE Reduced and Altered N.A. Beef Industry Integration, Especially Among Canada and the U.S., Temporarily • While Unable to Export Fed Steers to the U.S., Canada Increased Feeding, Slaughter Capacity, and Beef Exports to U.S. • U.S. Firms (Tyson/IBP, Cargill) Have Increased Investment in Canadian Processing Plants • Will Resumption of Canadian Cattle Exports to U.S. Spark Return to 2002 Scenario – Getting Close

  8. Integration in the North American Cattle and Beef Industry, 2004 $0, 0 Head of Beef Cattle $1.2 Billion, 355,000 Metric Tons of Beef $230 Million, 87,700 Metric Tons of Beef $2.5 Million, 14,000 Head of Beef Cattle $56 Million, 11,800 Metric Tons of Beef $670,000, 1,400 Head of Beef Cattle $600 Million, 106,500 Metric Tons of Beef $543 Million, 1,370,000 Head of Beef Cattle $33 Million, 5,900 Metric Tons of Beef

  9. Potential Disruptions to N.A.Beef Supply Chain • Diseases Such as BSE and FMD Could Again Disrupt Trade • Domestic Legislation, such as MCOOL and the Bioterrorism Act, Have Potential to Cause Disruptions • Anti-Dumping/Countervailing Duty Cases Filed by All Three N.A. Countries Against Each Other Strain Relations and Could Disrupt Trade Flows • Fluctuations in Exchange Rates Often Result in Temporary Changes in Advantages for Either U.S. or Canada/Mexico – and This Will Continue

  10. Summary • North American Beef Is Almost One Supply Chain • Markets React Immediately to ‘News,’ But U.S. Recovered Quickly While Pain Lingered in Canada • U.S. Increased Cattle Imports from Mexico and Beef Imports from Canada and Uruguay to Help Meet Demand

  11. Implications • Disruptions will Continue to Occur, But N.A. Supply Chain Is Resilient • NAFTA Appears to Facilitate Return to Integrated Markets • Adherence to International Standards Important, But Difficult Due to Political Influence

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