Top Banner
I F A S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado State University
23

I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

Jan 03, 2016

Download

Documents

Audra Green
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Demand Driven Agriculture:Opportunities and Liabilities for

Agricultural Research

Lawrence Busch

Michigan State University

Louis Swanson

Colorado State University

Page 2: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Central Theses

Page 3: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Current Trends

Formation of the WTO

Devolutionof

the State

ShiftingSupermarket

Strategies

PrivateSupermarket

Standards

PrivateRegulation

of Food

New Opps &Demands

On Producers

Rise of NewSocial

Movements

Page 4: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Other changes

• Rising incomes

• Restructured integrated global markets

• Changing consumption/values of consumers

• Transformation of commodity chain stakeholders interests and relationships

Page 5: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

From Supply to Demand

Supply-driven Demand- drivenSpot Markets Supply ChainsQuantities QualitiesCommodities Niches

Page 6: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

From Supply to Demand

Price competition

Non-price competition

Government-regulated

Industry-regulated (w/ gov’t oversight)

Protection oriented

Strategy oriented

Page 7: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

SInput

SuppliersProducers

Processors/ Distributors

Retailers Consumers

Supply Driven Commodity Chain

SeedsChemicalsMachinery

CannersPackersShippers

FarmersRanchers

CommodityGroups

SupermarketsRestaurantsFood Service

CheapMass-produced

Food

Supply

Page 8: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Linkages

• Power lies with input suppliers and output processors who run the commodity chains

• Farmers produce for ‘the market’

• Retailers are recipients of whatever system delivers

• Retailers merely bring it in back door and send it out the front door

Page 9: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Supply-Driven Research

• Assumes farmers are price takers

• Research permits farmers to lower production costs

• Early adopters gain until price declines

• Result is cheap food

• Green revolution repeats internationally what was done domestically

Page 10: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Supply Input Suppliers

Demand Driven Commodity Chain

HealthSafety

EnvironmentLaboretc.

Consumers

Demand

Retailers

Processors/ Distributors

Producers

Supply Management to maximize

profits

Page 11: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

US Retail Concentration

• Wal-Mart now dominates with 15% of all food retail sales

• Other majors include Kroger, Albertson, Safeway, Costco

• Top five = ~30% of market

• But competition remains severe

Page 12: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

The Global Big Three

• Wal-Mart– 5970 stores in 10 nations

• Carrefour– 10,378 stores in 29 nations

• Royal Ahold– 5066 stores in Europe, North America,

Latin America, Asia

Page 13: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Where Profits Are MadeLight Edges

Dark Middle

Page 14: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

So what do retailers do?

Page 15: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Page 16: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Provides Solution to Problem of Buridan’s Ass (Cochoy)

Page 17: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Demand-Driven Commodity Chain

Private standardsProduct/process differentiationRetailer restructuring of suppliers’

businessesRise of private label products (20%)Third Party audits of suppliersContract agricultureGlobal sourcing

Page 18: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Farmer Response: Alliances

• Bypass traditional agribusiness

• Add value for farmers

• Shared information across continents

• E.g., Michigan Blueberry Growers & Global Berry Farms (US, Chile, Guatemala)

• Cuts out middlemen, improves price data

Page 19: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Who wins? Who loses?

Winners• Niche/Specialty crop

producers• Largest, much

efficient bulk commodity producers

• ‘New age’ brokers• Consumers(?)

Losers• Bulk commodity

producers• Smaller, less efficient

producers• Old style brokers• Spot markets• Experiment stations(?)

Page 20: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

The Demise of Statistics

• Contracted prices secret

• Data on wholesales prices no longer available

• Statistics collected, but on ‘thin’ markets

• Results:– Market price no longer known– Published price unreliable– Markets do not necessarily clear

Page 21: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Demand-Driven Research

Challenges older approach

• What constitutes good science?

• What will serve the public good?

• Who are the clientele for AES research?

• What institutional structures are appropriate?

• What about productivity?

Page 22: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

The Research Community

• New generation of researchers no longer from the farm

• Public good issues rarely discussed

• Upstream research of little direct benefit to farmers, but important to input suppliers

• But input suppliers are fickle!

• Links between farmers & researchers weakened

Page 23: I FA S Demand Driven Agriculture: Opportunities and Liabilities for Agricultural Research Lawrence Busch Michigan State University Louis Swanson Colorado.

I

F A

S

Opportunities

• NGOs will continue to pressure retailers to restructure food system

• NGOs are potential supporters of AESs

• Needed:– New (niche) crops– New uses for traditional crops– Value-added products

that benefit farmers, retailers, consumers