The self-distancing and quarantine protocols put in place to slow the
spread of COVID-19 have reduced economic growth, shuttered consumers in
their homes and changed the way Americans purchase and consume food.
Food production, too, has been significantly disrupted, especially at
livestock processing facilities, where labor shortages and worker
protection measures are slowing throughput at plants around the country
and even causing some facilities to shut down. In late April President
Trump signed an executive order designating these companies as critical
infrastructure and instructing them to remain open when possible,
abiding by CDC guidelines to protect workers.
At the same time considerably fewer cattle and hogs are being
processed, wholesale meat prices are rising and the gap between the
value of meat products and the prices that producers receive for their
livestock is growing. That widening gap caught the attention of
President Trump, who recently voiced his concerns about the situation.
President Trump asked
the Department of Justice to investigate whether or not meat processing
companies participated in price fixing after attorneys general from 11
states issued a letter urging that action.
Strained Processing Capacity
Over the past two months, more than two dozen livestock processing
plants have closed down due to issues with COVID-19, for periods ranging
from a few days to two weeks or even indefinitely. In some cases, the
closures were due to outbreaks among workers at the plants. In other
cases, it is a struggle to keep workers, who are afraid of getting sick,
coming into the plant. Some of these facilities, such as the JBS
facility in Greeley, Colorado, have already reopened. That makes
estimating the country’s processing capacity a moving target, but we can
estimate that at times over the previous few weeks, pork processing
capacity has been reduced by as much as 20% and beef processing capacity
has been reduced by as much as 10%.
These estimates are derived from publicly available information and
company announcements about packing plants and further processing
facility closures. They do not factor in reductions in capacity due to
slowing throughput and reduced line speeds at these facilities, which
are also reducing capacity. In an effort to protect employees,
processing companies are implementing new policies (such as installing
plexiglass barriers between workers, spacing employees further apart,
etc.) and incorporating more social distancing in their facilities,
which slow the flow of product through their lines. This reduction is
more difficult to quantify but has the potential to have more
far-reaching impacts than direct plant closures. One data point that we
can use as a proxy for this difficult-to-gauge number is overall weekly
slaughter of cattle and hogs. Figure 1 shows the drastic drop in
slaughter numbers for hogs and cattle. Weekly total cattle slaughter has
decreased by 38% since its March high and 34% from the previous year.
Weekly hog slaughter has dropped 45% from its earlier high and 35% from
2019...MORE
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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1 comment:
There is truth in his analysis for this particular set of circumstances, but how does this apply to many multiple points in time when there was no Kung Flu for an excuse?
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