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Structural change in the food industry

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... the top ten buying group account for just over 50% of all EU food sales (Dobson). Source: Dobson, 2003, measured in national markets ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Structural change in the food industry


1
Structural change in the food industry
  • Lecture 31
  • Economics of Food Markets
  • Alan Matthews

2
The food chain
Input suppliers
Farmers
Processors
Retailers
Consumers
3
Lecture objectives
  • What are the main trends in the food chain at
    consumer, retailing, manufacturing and input
    supply levels?
  • We focus on changes in market structure and
    implications for market power
  • The growth in horizontal concentration
  • Changes in vertical coordination and growth of
    retail buyer power

4
Readings
  • Connor
  • US Senate
  • Lang
  • Henchion and McIntyre

5
Consumer trends
  • Drive for more convenience and added value foods,
    eating away from home
  • Demographic and lifestyle changes
  • Women working outside the home
  • Food consumption more a lifestyle choice
  • Nutrition and health issues
  • Positive (functional foods)
  • Negative (obesity)

6
Market power
  • Companies exert market power if they can raise
    prices above marginal costs

7
Market power price exceeds marginal cost
Price
Pm
AC MC
Pc
D
MR
Quantity
8
Market power in the food chain
Input suppliers
Farmers
Processors
Retailers
Consumers
9
Concerns raised by concentration
  • Market power reduces consumer welfare
  • Farmers are at greater risk of exploitation in
    the prices they pay or receive
  • Traditional price discovery fails under
    consolidation and vertical integration
  • Contract producers are vulnerable to arbitrary
    behaviour by integrators

10
Structural changes in the agri-food sector
  • Horizontal consolidation
  • The merger or combination of two or more firms in
    the same industry engaged in the same stage of
    the production cycle
  • Vertical coordination or integration
  • When one firm acquires or allies with another
    firm in the same industry but at another stage in
    the production cycle

11
Measures of concentration
  • The share of the total market held by an absolute
    number of the largest firms in the market, e.g.
    the largest 4, 8, 20
  • CR4 ratio over 60 generally taken as
    representing a concentrated industry
  • Herfindahl-Hirschman Index
  • The sum of squares of market shares of firms
  • For example, an industry consisting of two firms
    with market shares of 70 and 30 has an HHI of
    70²30², or 5,800
  • Markets with HHI over 1,800 are considered highly
    concentrated

12
Concentration in food manufacturing US evidence
  • In the 1980s, concentration particularly evident
    in beverages, tobacco products and heavily
    advertised packaged food products
  • Industries making industrial foodstuffs (flour,
    sugar, vegetables oils etc) or undifferentiated
    consumer products (such as fresh meats) were
    generally at low to moderate levels of
    concentration
  • Average concentration levels have continued to
    rise since then, with marked changes in the
    undifferentiated consumer foods sector (e.g. meat
    processing)

13
Source Connor 2003
14
Growing concentration in food processing
  • Traditional concentration concern is with food
    processors as sellers
  • But increasingly it is their role of buyers which
    is coming under scrutiny
  • Agricultural commodity markets will be narrower,
    and thus concentration higher
  • Geography farm products are bulky and transport
    costs are high
  • Perishability of farm products producers cannot
    respond to market power by threatening to
    withhold products until price improves

15
Growing concentration at retail level
  • once largely fragmented, consisting largely of
    independent retailers
  • even though there is variation in levels of
    retail concentration across EU member states,
    consolidation has now occurred all countries
    (Dobson)
  • major retailers have also been expanding
    internationally (Wal-Mart). Top ten retailers in
    the EU now account for over 30 of sales of all
    food and daily goods.
  • tables do not give full indication of the
    concentration facing suppliers in terms of retail
    procurement markets because of role of buying
    groups in many European countries.
  • when cross border alliances between buying groups
    are taken into account, adding the 5 largest
    retailers and the five largest alliances means
    that the top ten buying group account for just
    over 50 of all EU food sales (Dobson).

16
Source Dobson, 2003, measured in national markets
17
Source Dobson, 2003, measured across all EU
markets
18
Source Dobson, 2003
19
Source Forfas, Dynamics of the Retail Sector in
Ireland, 1999
20
Changing nature of the food supply chain
  • nature of the supply chain has changed
    considerably. Traditionally manufacturers have
    driven distribution by developing brands and then
    using a network of wholesalers and retailers to
    distribute goods to consumers
  • now large retailers control of shelf space and
    limited retail competition offering few
    alternatives for suppliers means they are
    gatekeepers to consumers. Gives them the
    potential power to extract more favourable terms.

21
Vertical coordination
  • Partial integration (captive supplies)
  • Does meat factory ownership of live cattle and
    pig supplies adversely affect prices received by
    livestock producers? Does this type of backward
    vertical integration cause live cattle prices to
    be lower and more variable than in the absence of
    such arrangements?
  • Integration increases price instability in the
    non-integrated channel, and probably also lowers
    prices
  • Integration may benefit integrated producers, but
    at the expense of unintegrated suppliers
  • A packer ban operates in a number of US states
    and passed US Senate in 2002 (Connor 2003).

22
Vertical coordination
  • Full integration (e.g. contract production)
  • Contrasts with open markets where coordination is
    done by price
  • Improves logistics, quality control..
  • but reduces value of open market prices
  • and can leave producer vulnerable to
    exploitation
  • Vertical chain management discussed later

23
Motivation for these structural changes
  • The desire to capture economies of scale and
    economies of scope (horizontal)
  • Reducing uncertainty and controlling quality in
    the supply chain (vertical)
  • Competition in the food industry in future will
    be more between alternative supply chains than
    individual firms
  • Should we be concerned about the threat of market
    power from growing concentration?
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