My most recent update from Meat and Livestock Australia states "[Australian] exports to the US reached 27,776 tonnes swt during October, up 2% year-on-year and the highest monthly volume since May 2007." It certainly appears to me that any shortage of U.S. beef supply that would have resulted from reduced Canadian live cattle and beef exports to the U.S. in October due to the implementation of COOL on October 1 are being made up by increased Australian beef imports.
This does not surprise me. And it should not surprise U.S. cattle producers. U.S. cattle producers who lobbied for Mandatory Country of Origin Labeling were shooting themselves in the foot and they should have seen that. COOL would not significantly affect Australian imports which were going to institutional and restaurant trade anyway but dramatically affect Canadian live cattle and beef imports which now have be segregated with reduced access to U.S. packing plants. The net result is increasing market share for Australia and reduced market share for Canada.
At some point the U.S. producer is going have give some thought to who would they rather have in their market. Canadian cattle producers with a similar production system with similar costs or maybe even higher costs? Or would U.S. producers rather seek to strengthen the hand of global competitors like the Australians and even Brazilians who have lower cost production systems.
The U.S. will remain the worlds number one importer of beef in any event but it seems to me that the U.S. cattle producer should give some thought to where they would rather see that beef come from.
This does not surprise me. And it should not surprise U.S. cattle producers. U.S. cattle producers who lobbied for Mandatory Country of Origin Labeling were shooting themselves in the foot and they should have seen that. COOL would not significantly affect Australian imports which were going to institutional and restaurant trade anyway but dramatically affect Canadian live cattle and beef imports which now have be segregated with reduced access to U.S. packing plants. The net result is increasing market share for Australia and reduced market share for Canada.
At some point the U.S. producer is going have give some thought to who would they rather have in their market. Canadian cattle producers with a similar production system with similar costs or maybe even higher costs? Or would U.S. producers rather seek to strengthen the hand of global competitors like the Australians and even Brazilians who have lower cost production systems.
The U.S. will remain the worlds number one importer of beef in any event but it seems to me that the U.S. cattle producer should give some thought to where they would rather see that beef come from.
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