Friday, October 23, 2009

Swine Flu Exacerbates Pork Industry Woes

The pork industry is facing one of its worst struggles in memory and an unwanted link to the so-called swine flu is exacerbating problems, experts told Congress on Thursday. "Over the past 24 months, pork producers have lost an average of $23 on each hog marketed ... and things look bleak going forward," said Don Butler, president of the National Pork Producers Council. Butler and other industry leaders testified to the House Agriculture Subcommittee on Livestock, Dairy and Poulty. Experts told the panel that the media labeling the H1N1 flu virus as "swine flu" was an unforeseen blow to an industry that already was struggling with its bottom line. Butler said research by the National Pork Producers Council showed a short-term reduction in pork prices immediately after the swine flu label stuck on the H1N1 virus. He says the council's research also shows a lasting negative connotation in the eyes of some consumers even though the USDA has said that swine flu cannot be transmitted by eating pork products...read more

1 comment:

primerica insurance said...

Not a big surprise. The same thing happened when there was the bird flu virus, or the "mad cow disease". The irony is, that this time, the illness can't be transmitted by eating the meat. This just proves how much influence the media have. Once the seeds of fear are sewn...

Lorne