You've got my curiosity up. If there is the ability to price fix, how did it get set up that way? Was this recognized as a problem pre-BSE and if so, how much of a problem was it and what, if anything, was being done to fix it?
This is something that didn't happen after the border got shut down and from what I can gather, it also just didn't rear it's ugly head six months prior to the discover of BSE.
If the packers can access that boxed beef market, what happened to the feedlots, backgrounders etc. ability to be able to access it?
From where I sit, it seems like this inverted funnel happened where the producers are at the top and it funnels down to where only a few players have access to the packers. Is this correct? I'm also seeing that the packers have been allowed to own cattle as well that they have custom fed by feedlots. Wasn't there a motion to the effect at the ACFA this February that allowed packers to own 10% of the cattle?
The part I am missing is that somewhere along the line these packers were given the power to do all of this. They couldn't do it if they weren't allowed to. How much of the responsibility lies with the various cattle organizations etc. that are representing the producers, i.e. cow/calf, backgrounder, smaller feedlots?
Certainly in reading many of the threads and based on what many people have said, some of the responsibility for this lies with these organizations. Is this a fair observation?
The frustration that one part of the so-called beef chain is making far more money than the rest is certainly understandable.
What could be done now to try and change the way things are so that in the future there is more market access and of course packing capacity.
This is something that didn't happen after the border got shut down and from what I can gather, it also just didn't rear it's ugly head six months prior to the discover of BSE.
If the packers can access that boxed beef market, what happened to the feedlots, backgrounders etc. ability to be able to access it?
From where I sit, it seems like this inverted funnel happened where the producers are at the top and it funnels down to where only a few players have access to the packers. Is this correct? I'm also seeing that the packers have been allowed to own cattle as well that they have custom fed by feedlots. Wasn't there a motion to the effect at the ACFA this February that allowed packers to own 10% of the cattle?
The part I am missing is that somewhere along the line these packers were given the power to do all of this. They couldn't do it if they weren't allowed to. How much of the responsibility lies with the various cattle organizations etc. that are representing the producers, i.e. cow/calf, backgrounder, smaller feedlots?
Certainly in reading many of the threads and based on what many people have said, some of the responsibility for this lies with these organizations. Is this a fair observation?
The frustration that one part of the so-called beef chain is making far more money than the rest is certainly understandable.
What could be done now to try and change the way things are so that in the future there is more market access and of course packing capacity.
Comment