Overview of the Food System Jim Dunn Agricultural Economics.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Feeding the World.
Advertisements

THE DOMESTIC MARKET. US POPULATION FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE DOMESTIC DEMAND A LOOK AT LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS.
The Red Meat Market Today What is driving or hindering the red meat market? May 8, 2014.
Strategies for Supporting Sustainable Food Systems Session 6.
Farmland…Uses and Challenges. Farmlands: Land that is used to grow crops and fruit The United States contains more than 100 million hectares of farmland.
Doing Business in Korea October 22, 2008 Ken Nye, Commodity Specialist Michigan Farm Bureau.
Organic Market Overview Andre Leu – Chairman Tim Marshall – Deputy Chairman Organic Federation of Australia, Chairman Andre Leu – Chairman Tim Marshall.
Agricultural Revolutions How did we get here?. Agriculture Is the raising of animals or the growing of crops to obtain food for primary consumption by.
Department of Agricultural Economics Purdue University Food Price Outlook Corinne Alexander Purdue University August 19,
The Future of Agriculture: Powerful trends affecting the U.S. food and agricultural system.
© CommNet 2013 Education Phase 3 Food production – farm to fork.
Farm Facts.
Food Consumption and Marketing in China A perspective on China’s rapidly changing food economy.
Food Marketing u The performance of all business activities involved in the flow of food products and services from the point of initial production until.
FAIR TRADE. Chocolate  Do you like Chocolate?  Do you know what chocolate is made from?  Milk, cocoa/cocoa butter, sugar, and vegetable oil  Cocoa.
Commodity Marketing Activity Chapter #2. Supply and Demand n Supply: quantity of a commodity the producers are willing to provide at a given price n If.
Education Phase 3 Food price and food choice. Global food prices Since 2005, food prices have risen globally. Year average *
Economics Text adapted from The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2009 ttp:// Toward-Undernutrition/dp/
The problems of fast food industry in the US and china Arlenne Olvera 11/20 /14 5 th period.
The Economics and Politics of U.S. Agricultural Policy James Dunn Pennsylvania State University.
FOOD CONSUMPTION AND EXPENDITURE PATTERNS
Meal Planning for the Family
COMMERCIAL AGRICULTURE. Agribusiness: An industrialized, corporate form Of agriculture, organized into networks Of agricultural product controlled by.
Learning Objectives This chapter introduces the notions of supply and demand and shows how they operate in competitive markets for individual commodities.
Introduction: Economic Issues Introduction: Economic Issues.
Supply Unit 5.
Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? Question 1 How many adults and children in the UK are either overweight or obese? A Almost 1/3 adults and 2/3 children.
Chapter 4 | Session 1: Getting Started Session 1: We Can! ™ Energize Our Families: Getting Started Chapter 4 | Parent Program Training Session 1: We Can!
Agriculture on Wheels ….taking Agriculture to the Classroom Pennsylvania Friends of Agriculture Pennsylvania Farm Bureau.
Balance of Payments, Exchange Rates & Trade Deficits
 “The most prevalent, fatal, chronic, relapsing disorder of the 21 st century.”  (obesity.org, 2010)  An excess of adipose tissue  Happens for different.
Agribusiness Library LESSON L060002: THE SCOPE AND IMPORTANCE OF AGRIBUSINESS.
ON HEALTH, ECONOMY AND THE ENVIRONMENT Unhealthy Eating Habits and its consequences LISSETTE COLLADO.
Group 1 Talking Points Why do we hear more about homicides than diet- related diseases? Which one can we prevent? Why have the obesity rates risen so much?
Department of Economics Food and Fuel Issues Iowa Seed Association Annual Convention Ames, Iowa November 18, 2008 Chad Hart Assistant Professor of Economics/Grain.
The International Food Market
The Economics and Politics of U.S. Agricultural Policy James Dunn Pennsylvania State University.
15.1 – Feeding the World.
The Food Supply Factors that affect the food supply.
In general, in LDCs, are crops consumed on or off the farm? –ON – subsistence agriculture.
United States Citizenship and Economics Debra Spielmaker Utah Agriculture in the Classroom Utah State University
Meal Planning for the Family
Why do we bring in outside food? James Dunn Agricultural Economist Penn State University.
CH 5.1 Supply Law of Supply Supply Curve Elasticity of supply Law of Supply Supply Curve Elasticity of supply.
Economy of the United States SSWG8 The student will describe the.
Characteristics of ag products u Raw material u Bulky, perishable products u Quality variation u Examples: Fresh produce Fresh produce Cattle Cattle Grains.
International Trade Trading Goods and Services. Specialization and Trade: Everyone Benefits Specialization: We specialize by doing just one kind of job.
Economics Text extracted from The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004.
Agricultural production & farm supply AG BM 102 Wicker production, Poland.
Department of Economics Factors That Determine The Cost of Food Chad Hart ISU Extension ANR Lunch and Learn Bioeconomy Community.
Childhood Overweight and Obesity. Data from NHANES surveys (1976–1980 and 2003–2006) show that the prevalence of obesity has increased: – for children.
The International Food Market AG BM 102. Introduction We have a Global Food Market U.S. imports 20% of our food and exports 30% of our production With.
Overview of the Food System AG BM 102. Source: CIAL News, August 27, 2015.
Learning outcomes Define obesity Identify the prevalence of obesity worldwide, nationwide and in Texas List the various health risks associated with obesity.
Your Output Market AG BM 460. Chuck Mothersbaugh Small vegetable grower Sells at two farmer’s markets Started in Oriental Vegetables Then more conventional.
Economics. Economic Basics Vocabulary: Economics: Study of how people meet their wants and needs Scarcity: Having a limited quantity of resources to meet.
AGRICULTURE AND HEALTH CARE Chapter 30. Paul Harvey – “So God Made a Farmer”
Inflation Breedlove Economics Inflation Inflation is an increase in the average level of prices, not a change in any specific price. Deflation is.
 The traditional structure of farm production and farm market can each be described in terms of a single identifying characteristic; product and production.
Chapter 10: Agriculture Key Issue 4.   Importance of Access to Markets – von Thunen model  Concentric circles based on importance, cost of shipping,
Modern Commercial Agriculture …According to “The Meatrix”?
Educating Producers and Consumers Unit 9 NS430 Whole Foods.
Healthy Eating workshop Wendi Udosen, Senior Family Support and Outreach Worker Sabrina Kerr, Children’s Centre Health and Wellbeing Coordinator.
General Facts About Agriculture in US. Farm and ranch families comprise just 2 percent of the U.S. population. More than 21 million American workers (15.
Why is Local Food Important?
The Economic Impact of Agriculture in Southern New Jersey
Agricultural production & farm supply
Tim Scharks Green River College
Land & food resources.
Presentation transcript:

Overview of the Food System Jim Dunn Agricultural Economics

Overview of the food system What is the food system? Location of production Location of consumption Paths to the consumer

The Food System – elements Products and services Value added Information Money

The Food System Information Money

Location of production Depends on product Agriculture is increasingly specialized Individual farms specialize Regions specialize Key factors: –Where the resources are –Where the consumers are –Transportation system

General Characteristics of U.S. Agriculture U.S. has about 5% of world’s people 17% of cotton 43% of corn 60% soybeans 6% of land 22% of apples Cotton

Economies of Size in Farming Larger farms can specialize more Use equipment better Spread management over more units Get better rates on shipping and purchasing For crops maximum size hit limits because of distance

Family Farms Most farms are still family farms 48,000 PA Farms 7 have more than 10 stockholders 117 are not family corporations Corporate farming doesn’t work very well Returns low Hired workers don’t work as hard Hours an issue

Unique characteristics of farm supply. Commodity products - low barriers to entry, no product differentiation Often one crop per year Perishability- strawberries, cattle - can't sit on product waiting for better price -sell it or smell it. Producers small compared to market - price takers

More unique characteristics Time lags introduce expectations- don't know price when decision is made Short-run versus long-run elasticity One crop versus all food - limited amount of land Price variability - inelastic supply and demand makes prices variable

US Population 2000 Census Million 0 to 5 5 to to to to to 35

Expenditure share of types of food in the U.S. consumer’s food basket TypeShare Meat33.7% Fruit and vegetables14.0% Cereal & bakery products12.6% Dairy13.6% Sugar & sweets4.2% Fats & oils2.7% Non-alcoholic beverages11.0% Other prepared foods8.4%

Paths to the consumer Food consumed at home and food away from home Food away from home: –33% of food consumed –46% of the money spent on food Farmer’s share of the money: –25% of food at home –16% of food away from home

Share depends on product All Food (2000) Farm receipts $123 billion Marketing costs $538 billion

Farmer’s Share ProductShareProductShare Eggs53%Applesauce16% Beef49%Sugar27% Milk34%Potato chips8% Apples21%Corn flakes4% Oranges15%TV Dinner14%

What accounts for the marketing costs?

The share of marketing costs is rising

Source: Economic Report of the President

Source: USDA

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

Food away from home continues to increase in importance Source: USDA

Demographics Population growing by 1.5% per year (half immigration) Family size shrinking One person households growing Two-wage earner families growing College educated growing Non-European portion growing Segmented market

The Role of Income Doesn’t affect quantity in U.S. in measurable amounts Affects food choice Affects food away from home Vastly more important elsewhere – 50% of income for food in some countries

Diet, Health, & Food Marketing A growing concern – aging Baby-boomers Health foods a growing market Organic foods rapidly growing market – 2% of all food – recession has hit it hard Big disconnect between talk & action – salty snacks

Obesity in the United States Nearly 2 out of 3 adult Americans are overweight or obese Overweight prevalence among children and adolescents has risen from 5% in 1970s to 15% in 2000 Linked to increased risk of heart disease, diabetes, several types of cancer Increased medical costs, lower productivity and output 2001 Surgeon General’s report identifies cost of $117 billion to U.S. economy – much more now

Recent Food Scares Chinese pet food with melamine California spinach Mexican green onions Mad cow disease Bird flu Genetically modified foods

Reasons to Buy Local Cincinnati Enquirer – August 7, 2007 Support local businesses Food safety Fossil fuel use Taste Nutrition

Does Eating Local Food Save Energy? No long-distance transportion Where do you buy it? How much driving does this entail? How much do you buy per trip? Long-distance transport of food doesn’t use much energy per pound Full semi-truckloads The Economist cited research that half of energy use in food transport is by consumer (Britain) If you preserve food to keep it through the winter it uses a lot of energy (even commercially)

Some questions Could we feed ourselves with locally grown food? Is locally grown food safer? Do we need to import food? Is food from elsewhere riskier than domestically raised food? Is our food safe? Is it riskier than 10 years ago?

Could we feed ourselves with locally grown food? No! And if we tried it would be prohibitively expensive And we would have very little variety Lack of specialization would sacrifice all economies of size We are surrounded by cities and very little farmland Lots of labor needed – immigration issue

Is locally grown food safer? Probably not! Bigger, specialized farms can concentrate on details Small, multi-product farms have too many balls in the air

Do we need to import food from abroad? Not necessarily We would lose variety in our diet Food costs would go up No bananas or coffee or tea or chocolate No grapes in the winter We export enormous amounts of food They won’t buy our stuff unless we reciprocate

Variety of Food Vastly greater than in past Fresh fruits & vegetables in winter Prepared foods Ethnic foods – Chinese, Mexican, other Asian – not just Italian Hamburger Helper Rice helper Foods of foreign origin Meal solutions

Concluding Comments Marketing makes the food system work Regional specialization requires lots of transportation Diverse consumer needs require services (added value) Lots of services – all have to be paid for Each product has its own story