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How, over the past 40 years, U.S food supply chain has become concentrated in hands of a few large multinationals, which serve as middlemen in everything from seed genetics to hog processing to supermarkets. Do we want such a business model in India; think hard, do we ?
~From 1975 to 2015, Market share of 4 largest beef packing firms increased from 25% to 85%.
~From 1988 to 2016, Market share of 4 largest soybean seed firms increased from 42% to 76%.
~From 1976 to 2015, Market share of 4 largest hog processing firms increased from 33% to 66% !
~From 1997 to 2018, Market share of 4 "top grocers" increased from 25% to 44%.
~~From 1988 to 2016, Market share of 4 largest corn seed firms increased from 59% to 85%.
~6 brands acct for half the global chocolate market, an asymmetrical market that favors only buyers & traders
~In 1990, ranchers received 59 cents of each dollar spent on beef, while retailers received 33 cents; today, 38 cents & 51 cents
~Since 2014, price farmers receive for milk has fallen by 40%, 55% below avg farm’s break-even point. 4600 dairy farms closed each year for two
years.
Now, Big 6 (Monsanto, DuPont, Syngenta, Dow, Bayer, BASF) have consolidated into a Big 4 dominated by Bayer & Corteva (new firm created after the Dow–DuPont merger), & rounded out with ChemChina & BASF. These 4 firms control more than 60% of global #seed sales !
By 1998 the large agribusiness companies had consolidated by buying up smaller firms to accumulate more IP rights. By 2008, Monsanto’s patented genetics alone were planted on 80% of US corn acres,86% of cotton acres & 92% of soybean acres. Today, these percentages are even higher
Economists say-an industry loses its competitive character when concentration ratio of the top 4 firms is <40%. The seed industry continues to exceed this benchmark. For eg-even before the Big 4 merged, 3 firms Monsanto,Syngenta & Vilmorin controlled 60% of global veg seed market
Industries with a “concentration ratio”, defined as the market share of the 4 largest Companies—of 40% or more as anticompetitive !
Such is the U.S model #consolidation
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Poultry=35%
Beef=85%
Corn #seed=85%
Soybean seed=76%
Agrochemicals at 84%
Retail food=40%
Farm equipment=40%
A sector with a 4-firm concentration ratio (CR4) of
more than 40% is uncompetitive, an oligopoly; a CR4 of over 70% is a monopoly. Above this threshold, concentration can entrench dominant market positions for the largest Companies; exert price pressure on suppliers or buyers !
Oligopolies create barriers to entry for new firms & establish mutually beneficial pricing arrangements with each other. This behavior in markets controlled by just a few firms is more common than outright
monopolies, but is harder to identify as the companies are in competition.
Highly concentrated buyer power, such as in meatpacking, is called monopsony. Seller concentration (monopoly), is prevalent in seeds, #agri chemicals & equipment. Both forms of market power allow company a great deal of control over practices of those who sell to or buy from them
Large firms do not just dictate terms to Co's in their supply chain, they buy up those Co's, in a process called vertical integration. Tyson Foods purchased chicken breeders, feed mills, slaughter facilities & transportation companies & incorporated them under the Tyson umbrella.
Horizontal integration happens when competing firms merge, which can look like the German seed & chemical giant Bayer purchasing the American seed & chemical giant Monsanto, or like Coca-Cola buying small smoothie company called Odwalla in order to diversify its beverage profile.
Concentration is self-reinforcing; consolidation in one part of the industry triggers similar activity across the industry. Large retailers prefer “one-stop” sourcing from large wholesalers and processers, while the processing industry relies on just a few buyers for most sales.
As firms grow, they prefer to source from fewer entities in their supply chain, as it simplifies ordering, consistency, transport etc. A company that has recently expanded through a merger or acquisition may exert pressure on its suppliers to likewise expand or make other changes
4 companies, 2 of which are foreign-owned, now slaughter 52% of all meat consumed in the US, more than twice the market share that the 4 largest companies held in 2002. Consolidation results in entire control being transferred to the corporations, where farmers r totally helpless
The US crop subsidy program, for example, will continue to give 80% of all farm subsidies to the top 20% of American farmers. It is little wonder that monopolies & corporate farms have grown more powerful at the expense of workers/family farmers & our babus want to ape US model🙄
The number of #farms in U.S has fallen, & their size has increased. Farm numbers peaked at 6.8 million
in 1935, then fell sharply until leveling off at 2.3 million in 1974. Since then, decline has continued, but at a slower pace. There were just 2.02 million farms in 2020 !
Mid-size U.S #farms have been hardest hit, while the no's of very small & very large farms have increased. In the 2017 survey farms with 50~1,000 acres declined 5-15%. Only very small farms (fewer than 10 acres) & very large farms (more than 2,000 acres) increased in that period
Mid size #farms are too large to sell direct to consumers (eg-farmers markets) and too small to sell to the largescale distributors that supply large stores. They have been especially hard hit by consolidation, as there are ever-fewer mid-size businesses to buy from and sell to !
Result=Majority of food comes from biggest operations. In 1991, farms with $1 million or more in GCFI accounted for 1/3 of all farm production; by 2015, they accounted for more than half; while small farms with less than $350,000 in GCFI dropped from 46% of production to 25% !
Consolidation at farm level occurred alongside greater farm specialization. Farms reorganized to focus on either livestock or crops, or on a greater specialization, which reflects the shift from raising farm animals on diversified farms to large-scale animal feeding operations !
From 1996~2015, % of corn grown on farms that also raised livestock fell from 46% to 33%. Few farms grow only 1 crop, but farms increasingly grow just 2 or 3, down from 4 to 6. Livestock production shifted towards farms that rely on purchased feed rather than growing own feed !
The prices that the U.S #dairy monopolists pay #farmers for their milk is based not on supply & demand, but on a convoluted formula for "the price of block cheddar traded on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange"; & our Netas + Babus want to ape this #agri model. We need to be original
In the 1980s, 37 cents out of every dollar went back to the US #farmer. Today, the share has dropped to 15 cents on every dollar. This new economic reality forces farmers to survive on volumes, creating a system where only d largest farms can make a living. Get big or Get Out !🤨
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With a debt of 2.63 lakh crore, a revenue deficit of 12,554 crore, a fiscal liability of 24,352 Cr, a liability of 6,068 Cr on debt servicing & GST compensation regime coming to an end in June 2022, AAP Govt has a mammoth task w.r.t keeping it's promises
Punjab's power subsidy bill is already set to touch 18,000 crore this fiscal even as an amount of 7,117 crore is due from the previous fiscal. Govt says that 300 free units will cost 1800 crore, but the power experts say that the government would end up paying Rs 3,000 crore !
The state government is already grappling with free travel facility for women in public sector buses that has cost the exchequer Rs 600 crore this year and state owned transport bodies are crying foul.
#Paddy, farmers income/acre increased from Rs 37,660 in 2013-14 to Rs 53,000 in 2020-21,i.e. 40.73%
#Wheat farmers income/ acre increased to Rs 39,500 in 2020-21 Vs Rs 27,000 in 2013-14, an increase of 46.3%
What about input costs
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For growing #paddy in #Punjab per acre, in 2013-14, farmers owning land spent Rs 9,000 as input cost, & farmers leasing land spent Rs 24,000. But in 2021, farmers owning land spent Rs 18,000+ i.e. 100% increase, & farmers leasing land spent Rs 43,000, which is a 79.2% increase !
The input cost included around Rs 500 to grow a #paddy nursery for a one acre field in 2013-14, which has now increased to Rs 1,200; in 2013-14, the labor cost for transplanting nursery into the main field was 1800/acre, which has now increased to Rs 3500/acre i.e. 100% increase
Will Govt have enough wheat for Public Distribution System (NFSA), Midday Meals & other regular welfare schemes including Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana ?
Will Govt have enough wheat for open market sales to flour mills ?
With #wheat opening stocks of 19 million ton (MT) & expected procurement of 18.5 MT, Govt will have 37.5 MT of wheat available for 2022-23. We take out the Min buffer Stock for March 31, which is 7.5 MT, it will leave 30 MT available for sale from government godowns this fiscal.
Govt requires 26 million ton (MT) to run Public Distribution System, Midday Meals & other regular welfare schemes, 5.4 MT for Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana scheme for April-Sept 2022; this alone comes to 31.4 MT, which is more than what the Govt will b holding this year
There is 10~15% #wheat yield loss in Punjab, Haryana, UP & MP, due to weather anomalies; wheat to mustard acreage shift & farmers holding back crop & exports; Seems, Govt procurement target of 44 million tons will fall short by around 10 million tons
#Haryana has set a target of 85 lakh ton #wheat procurement, but in the first 17 days, State mandis have witnessed nearly 20% less wheat arrival compared to last year. #Punjab has a target of 130 lakh ton, but reliable sources say procurement would likely be around 100 lakh tons.
Govt position is that "India's new season #wheat harvest is underway, with this year's production at a record 111.32 million tons-making it the 6'th season in a row that India has produced a surplus. But, it seems nobody factored yield loss of 10~15% i.e. at least 11 million tons
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Reality of Doubling #Farmers Income by Modi Govt by 2022
Dalwai committee formed to double farmer's income ,talked about ‘real’ growth in farmer income & calculated that this would require an annual avg of 10.4% growth in income for 7 years, starting with 2015-16 base.
The #farm household’s avg monthly income of ₹8,059 in 2015-16 is an “extrapolation” of the Situation Assessment Survey (SAS) of 2012-13. The extrapolation was done by the Ashok Dalwai-headed committee (DFI committee) constituted in 2017 to suggest how to double #farmers’ income.
Economic Survey 2021-22, indicated that the avg monthly income per #agricultural household in the country stood at Rs 10,218 in 2019, up from Rs 8,059 in 2015-16, & Rs 6,426 in 2013-14, whereas #farmers income in Jharkhand, M.P, Nagaland, Odisha decreased between 2015-16 to 2019
Cheeseburger in U.S, explains bigger grocery bill of American consumers. they r seeing food prices rise at the fastest rate in decades. Supply chain snarls, labor shortages & climate challenges (plus the conflict in Ukraine) share the blame, but the main culprit is #Consolidation
Beef
Beef costs 16% more Vs March 2021.
Tyson, JBS, National & Cargill have been accused of increasing prices on meat products while keeping rancher profits low, they control over 80 % of the beef supply chain.
US port congestion has hampered bread bakers, who were waiting longer for those products. 50 input costs had jumped by double digits as of Jan, including hikes in the prices for wheat & natural gas reqd to power ovens. this was before Ukraine crisis, a major wheat exporter