Title: DAIRY INDUSTRY OVERVIEW
1- Dairy Marketing
- Dr. Roger Ginder
- Econ 338a
- Fall 2007
- Lecture 2
2DAIRY INDUSTRY OVERVIEW
1. GRADES OF MILK 2. FEDERAL MILK MARKETING
ORDERS 3. MILK PRICES PRE-2000 CLASS I, II, AND
III BLEND MW VS. POST 2000 CLASS
I,II,III,IV 4. DAIRY PRICE SUPPORT
PROGRAM 5. USDA PROPOSED RULE FOR ORDER
REFORM 6. MILK COMPONENTS AND COMPONENT
PRICING 7. SUPPLY, DEMAND
3GRADE A MILK
- THE ONLY GRADE OF MILK THAT IS ELIGIBLE FOR USE
IN FLUID PRODUCTS. - IT IS PRODUCED UNDER STRICTER SANITARY INSPECTION
REQUIREMENTS THAN GRADE B MILK (PMO-1993) - GRADE B CAN ONLY BE USED IN MANUFACTURED DAIRY
PRODUCTS SUCH AS BUTTER, CHEESE, OR POWDER - SOME GRADE A MILK IS USED FOR THE PRODUCTION OF
MANUFACTURED PRODUCTS
4FEDERAL MARKETING ORDER
- DEFINITION
- A REGULATION, ISSUED BY THE SECRETARY OF
AGRICULTURE, THAT REQUIRES THE COMMODITY INVOLVED
TO BE MARKETED IN ACCORDANCE WITH PROCEDURES
SPELLED OUT IN THE REGULATION. - LEGAL BASIS AGRICULTURAL MARKETING
AGREEMENTS ACT, 1937
5MOST COMMODITIES ARE NOT MARKETED UNDER MARKETING
ORDERS
1. Grains 2. Hay and Forages
3. Hogs and Cattle 4. Poultry and
Eggs 5. Sheep and Goats 6. Timber and
Forest Products
6OTHER COMMODITIES ARE MARKETED UNDER MARKETING
ORDERS
1. GRADE A MILK (98 OF TOTAL) FEDERAL ORDERS
(75-80) STATE ORDERS (18) 2. ALL FRUITS AND
NUTS (50 OF TOTAL) NUTS) (100 OF
TOTAL) TART CHERRIES (100 OF TOTAL) OLIVES
(100 OF TOTAL) CRANBERRIES (100 OF
TOTAL) CITRUS FRUIT (95 OF TOTAL) 3. VEGETABLE
S (15 OF TOTAL)
7SOME COMMODITIES ARE MARKETED UNDER MARKETING
ORDERS
WHY??
8SOME COMMODITIES ARE MARKETED UNDER MARKETING
ORDERS
WHY?? Large Multi-Year Investments In
Establishing Groves and Orchards (Fruits
Nuts) Extremely Perishable (Milk) Potential
for Hold-Up Problem
9MILK MARKETING ORDER
A USDA REGULATION THAT REQUIRES GRADE A MILK
BUYERS TO PAY SPECIFIED MINIMUM PRICES FOR GRADE
A MILK DEPENDING ON HOW THE MILK IS USED.
10FMMOS Have Been in Transition Since 1995
- 19601995 Was a Relatively Stable Period
- 1995---2000 Was a Transition Period
- 2000 ---- A Major Reform Took Place
- Basing Points for Pricing
- Classes of Milk
- FMMO Boundaries
- Basic Formula Price
11MINNESOTA WISCONSIN(M-W) PRICE
- A PRICE SERIES USED TO REFLECT THE AVERAGE PRICE
PAID FOR GRADE B MILK PURCHASED BY MANUFACTURING
PLANTS IN MINNESOTA AND WISCONSIN. - It was replaced in mid 1995 by a modified formula
price (BFP). - The M-W uses monthly reports from 160-170 plants
and a sub sample of 67 for pay prices they
offered for the first half of current month.
12MININUM CLASS PRICES UNDER MILK MARKETING ORDERS
1960-1995
- CLASS III MINNESOTA-WISCONSIN
- CLASS II CLASS III A FIXED DIFFERENTIAL
- CLASS I CLASS III A VARIABLE
DIFFERENTIAL (THAT INCREASED AS THE
DISTANCE AWAY FROM EAU CLAIRE, WI
INCREASED). - THUS, FEDERAL MILK MARKETING ORDERS IMPLEMENT
CLASSIFIED PRICING, FORMULA PRICING, AND PRICE
DISCRIMINATION FOR GRADE A MILK.
13CLASSES OF MILK ARE BASED ON THEIR USE IN
DIFFERENT END PRODUCTS---FMMO Milk Classes
Before 1995
Split into Class III and IIIa after the mid
1990s. Butter and NDFM powder moved to Class
IIIa.
14CLASSES OF MILK ARE BASED ON THEIR USE IN
DIFFERENT END PRODUCTS---FMMO Milk Classes
Before 1995
Split into Class III and IIIa after the mid
1990s. Butter and NDFM powder moved to Class
IIIa.
15CLASSES OF MILK ARE BASED ON THEIR USE IN
DIFFERENT END PRODUCTS---FMMO Milk Classes
Before 1995
Split into Class III and IIIa after the mid
1990s. Butter and NDFM powder moved to Class
IIIa.
16BLEND PRICE
AVERAGE GRADE A MILK PRICE PAID TO PRODUCERS WHO
ARE POOLED IN AN ORDER A WEIGHTED AVG. OF CLASS
I, II, AND III MILK PRICES WHERE THE WEIGHTS ARE
EQUAL TO THE UTILIZATION IN EACH CLASS PI (
CL. I) PII ( CL. II) PIII ( CL. III)
(PI QI) (PII QII) (PIII
QIII) ________________________________________
QT
17BASIC FORMULA PRICE (BFP)1995-2000
- An adjusted M-W type price determined by a
weighted average computed from prices of several
manufactured products. - An attempt to tweak the old M-W and make it
better reflect the national market - These products included Grade AA butter, nonfat
dry milk, dry buttermilk, and cheddar cheese.
18USDA PROPOSED RULE FOR FEDERAL MILK MARKETING
ORDER REFORM
- Federal Agricultural Improvement and Reform (Fair
Act) 1996 made mandated for Secretary of Ag to
reform milk marketing system. Several changes
were required before April 1, 1999. - Reduced number of FMMOs.
- Redefinition of classes of milk based on various
uses. - Replacement of the M-W basic formula price as the
Class I and Class II mover - 1995-2000 BFP is a stopgap replacement for
competitive M-W Grade B pay price - Does not include Grade A used for manufacturing
purposes - Establishment of Class I Differentials
- Single basing point vs multiple basing point
- Size of Class I differential
- Address quality adjustment issues
19NEW BASIC FORMULA PRICE (After 1/1/2000)
- Class II (new 2000 definition)
- Class III (new 2000 definition)
- Class IV (new 2000 definition)
- Announced by USDA (first Friday or before 5th of
the month) - Applies to preceding month
- Synthetic or constructed price (no one receives)
- Reflects the value of a cwt of standardized milk
- Based on value of components in cheese/whey
- Butterfat
- Protein
- Other solids
- Values for components are derived from final
product market values instead of market values
for milk itself. - Cheese
- Butter
- Dry whey
20CLASSES OF MILK ARE NOW BASED ON THEIR USE IN
DIFFERENT END PRODUCTS
21CLASSES OF MILK ARE BASED ON THEIR USE IN
DIFFERENT END PRODUCTS
22CLASSES OF MILK ARE BASED ON THEIR USE IN
DIFFERENT END PRODUCTS
23CLASSES OF MILK ARE BASED ON THEIR USE IN
DIFFERENT END PRODUCTS
24THE GOVERNMENTS DAIRY PRICE SUPPORT PROGRAM
- THE PROGRAM INVOLVES GOVERNMENT PURCHASES OF
MANUFACTURED DAIRY PRODUCTS (PAID FOR WITH TAX
DOLLARS). THIS IS DONE IN ORDER TO SUPPORT
PRODUCER LEVEL MANUFACTURING MILK PRICES
(PRODUCTS THAT CAN BE MFG. WITH GRADE B MILK). - THIS PROGRAM IS SEPARATE FROM THE FEDERAL MILK
MARKETING ORDER PROGRAM -- ALTHOUGH IT IS OFTEN
CONFUSED WITH THE ORDER PROGRAM. - PRICE SUPPORTS AFFECT FMMOS SINCE THE BFP IS
BASED ON THE CLASS III OR CLASS IV PRODUCT PRICES - TRENDS OVER THE PAST 20 YEARS ARE TOWARD LOWER
PRICE SUPPORTS.
25AVERAGE MILK COMPOSITION
SOLIDS CWT Butterfat 3.67 lbs. Protein 3.2
lbs. Lactose 4.75 lbs. Ash/Minerals .65
lbs. WATER 87.73 lbs. Total 100.00 lbs.
26COMPONENT PRICING ATPRODUCER LEVEL
- ANY PAYMENT PLAN THAT PRICES MILK ON THE BASIS OF
VOLUME PLUS ONE MAJOR COMPONENT - NOW THE MOST COMMONLY USED COMPONENT IS MILK FAT
CONTENT (e.g., BUTTERFAT DIFFERENTIAL)
27MULTIPLE COMPONENT PRICING AT PRODUCER LEVEL
- A payment plan that prices milk based on two or
more component parts (e.g., skim milk, milk fat,
total solids (TS), solids not fat (SNF), protein,
lactose water) - Possible components which could be used include
- Milk fat
- Protein
- Total solids (TS)
- Solids not fat (SNF)
- Lactose/Minerals/Ash
- Water
28Questions?
29MILK UTILIZATION (DEMAND)
Manufactured milk products Milk
lbs. Butter 24,993 16.5 Cheese American 29,
415 19.5 Other 20,456 13.5 Cottage 589 0.4
Canned and condensed milk 1,178 0.8 Dry whole
milk 1,130 0.7 Ice cream/frozen 12,063 8.0 Oth
er misc. mfg. uses 199 0.1 Total
manufacturing uses 90,691 60.0 Fluid milk
products 55,329 36.6 Used on farm 1,896 1.3 Resi
dual 3,160 2.1