This clip deals with pork but I thought the conclusions reached may equally apply to beef promotion.
ILLINOIS: Do pork producers benefit from the slogan, "Pork. The Other White Meat."?
26.jul.07
University of Illinois Extension
Stu Ellis
http://www.farmgate.uiuc.edu/archive/2007/07/do_pork_produce.html
Everyone knows the marketing slogan: Pork, the Other White Meat; but has it made pork products any more desirous to the consumer asks Stu Ellis in this column? After all, that is the intent of the pork check-off program, as it tries to produce and market a better product to enhance the price of pork. Has it achieved what it set out to do, particularly with consumers also being bombarded by marketing messages also promoting beef and poultry?
Ellis goes on to say that the $60 million pork check off program is controlled by the National Pork Board, and NPB Directors hired economists from North Carolina State University and RTI International to evaluate the impact of the pork advertising expenditures. The research took advertising expenditures into consideration, along with health issues that tend to soften demand. Those included foot and mouth disease in Britain in 2001, BSE in Washington State in 2003, listeria fears in poultry in 2002, and Avian influenza in poultry in 2004.
Ellis writes that the economists report, “We find the impacts of advertising and food safety effects to be economically small compared with price and expenditure effects. However, cost-benefit analyses are needed to evaluate whether such practices are profitable to producers.” However, they believe that generic pork advertising appears to help demand for poultry more than pork. Poultry, of course, does not have a check-off program but may be getting a “free ride” from the pork producers.
ILLINOIS: Do pork producers benefit from the slogan, "Pork. The Other White Meat."?
26.jul.07
University of Illinois Extension
Stu Ellis
http://www.farmgate.uiuc.edu/archive/2007/07/do_pork_produce.html
Everyone knows the marketing slogan: Pork, the Other White Meat; but has it made pork products any more desirous to the consumer asks Stu Ellis in this column? After all, that is the intent of the pork check-off program, as it tries to produce and market a better product to enhance the price of pork. Has it achieved what it set out to do, particularly with consumers also being bombarded by marketing messages also promoting beef and poultry?
Ellis goes on to say that the $60 million pork check off program is controlled by the National Pork Board, and NPB Directors hired economists from North Carolina State University and RTI International to evaluate the impact of the pork advertising expenditures. The research took advertising expenditures into consideration, along with health issues that tend to soften demand. Those included foot and mouth disease in Britain in 2001, BSE in Washington State in 2003, listeria fears in poultry in 2002, and Avian influenza in poultry in 2004.
Ellis writes that the economists report, “We find the impacts of advertising and food safety effects to be economically small compared with price and expenditure effects. However, cost-benefit analyses are needed to evaluate whether such practices are profitable to producers.” However, they believe that generic pork advertising appears to help demand for poultry more than pork. Poultry, of course, does not have a check-off program but may be getting a “free ride” from the pork producers.
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