Overview
This data set provides monthly average price values,
and the differences among those values, at the farm, wholesale,
and retail stages of the production and marketing chain
for selected cuts of beef, pork, and broilers. In addition,
retail prices are provided for beef and pork cuts, turkey,
whole chickens, eggs, and dairy products.
Price spreads are annual estimates for 1999-2004, quarterly
estimates for 2002-present, and monthly for the last 2
years. The retail price file provides monthly estimates
for the last 6 months. The historical file provides data
since 1970.
For help understanding the data set, see About
This Product and Documentation.
Data
Data Set |
Last
Updated |
Next
Update |
|
Beef
values and price spreads |
Sep 16, 2008 |
Oct 16, 2008 |
|
Pork
values and price spreads |
Sep 16, 2008 |
Oct 16, 2008 |
|
Retail
prices for beef, pork, poultry cuts, eggs, and
dairy products |
Sep 16, 2008 |
Oct 16, 2008 |
|
Summary
of retail prices and price spreads |
Sep 16, 2008 |
Oct 16, 2008 |
|
Historical
monthly price spread data for beef, pork, broilers,
turkeys, and eggs |
Feb
20,
2008 |
Feb
2009 |
|
Release Date
Data are released immediately after the Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) updates its website for Consumer
Price Indexes. See the 2008
ERS release calendar for specific dates.
Related Resource
Beef and
Pork Values and Price Spreads Explained examines
how marketing costs affect livestock and meat prices
in the short and long run. Slow price adjustment explains
most of the month-to-month changes in beef and pork
price spreads.
Related Data Products
Retail Scanner Prices for
Meat contains monthly average retail price data for
selected cuts of red meat and poultry, based on electronic
supermarket scanner data. While not based on a random
sample, the raw data underlying the database are from
supermarkets across the United States that account for
approximately 20 percent of U.S. supermarket sales.
Red
Meat Yearbook presents monthly, quarterly, and annual
data on commercial livestock slaughter and meat production;
livestock and meat prices and price indexes; inventories
of cattle, hogs, and sheep; and meat supply and utilization.
Price Spreads from Farm to Consumer offers two ways to compare farm-to-retail price spreads. The Marketing Bill is a composite estimate of the value added to agricultural products by the food marketing system for all types of food. At-Home Foods by Commodity Group evaluates farm and retail prices for foods belonging to each of several commodity groups.
Related Briefing Rooms
Food Marketing System in the U.S.
Cattle
Hogs
Poultry and Eggs
|