The Transformation of U.S. Livestock Agriculture: Scale, Efficiency, and Risks
by
James MacDonald and
William McBrideEconomic Information Bulletin No. (EIB-43) 46 pp, January 2009
U.S. livestock production has shifted to much larger and more specialized farms, and the various stages of input provision, farm production, and processing are now much more tightly coordinated through formal contracts and shared ownership of assets. Important financial advantages have driven these structural changes, which in turn have boosted productivity growth in the livestock sector. But structural changes can also generate environmental and health risks for society, as industrialization concentrates animals and animal wastes in localized areas. This report relies on farm-level data to detail the nature, causes, and effects of structural changes in livestock production.
Keywords: Livestock, dairy, broilers, hogs, fed cattle, farm structure, scale economies, contract agriculture, CAFOs, growth-promoting antibiotics
In this publication...
- Report summary,
155 kb
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- Abstract, Contents, and Summary,
46 kb
- Introduction,
25 kb
- How Has the Structure of Animal Agriculture Changed?,
150 kb
- Drivers of Structural Change: Technology and Scale Economies,
199 kb
- Other Drivers of Structural Change,
22 kb
- Impacts of Structural Change,
176 kb
- Conclusions,
17 kb
- References,
23 kb
- Entire report,
675 kb
Charts and graphs (in .png format) from this report are available in the .zip file listed below. The .zip file also contains a document (readme.txt) that lists the name and title of each chart or graph file.
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