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축산알기/해외실태

미국 쇠고기 유통단계별 비용(2010~2015) 첨부파일

by 큰바위얼굴. 2016. 2. 3.


beef.xls


cuts.xls


history.xls


pork.xls


sumtab.xls





http://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/meat-price-spreads.aspx


Data Set   
DownloadsLast UpdatedNext Update
Choice beef values and spreads and the all-fresh retail valueDownload as Excel1/20/20162/19/2016
Pork values and spreadsDownload as Excel1/20/20162/19/2016
Retail prices for beef, pork, poultry cuts, eggs, and dairy productsDownload as Excel1/20/20162/19/2016
Summary of retail prices and price spreadsDownload as Excel1/20/20162/19/2016
Historical monthly price spread data for beef, pork, broilersDownload as Excel2/20/20152/19/2016



Source

Retail prices are from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Consumer Price Index (CPI). Wholesale and farm prices are from USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service. Conversion factors developed by ERS are used to convert retail weight to carcass-weight equivalence.

Scope and Coverage

Data cover selected cuts of beef, pork, and poultry, as well as eggs and dairy products. Price spreads are reported for last 6 years, 12 quarters, and 24 months. The retail price file provides monthly estimates for the last 6 months. The historical file provides data since 1970.

Variables

Variable nameDefinition
Values
Retail pricesAverage retail prices for the selected product as reported by BLS, measured in dollars per pound for meat, dollars per dozen for eggs, and dollars per gallon or carton for dairy products
Retail valueAverage value of the selected cut of meat at the grocery store, measured in cents per pound of retail weight
Wholesale valueAverage value of the meat as it leaves the packing plant, measured in cents per pound of retail weight
Gross farm valueValue of the animal when it is sold, measured in cents per pound of retail weight
Net farm valueGross farm value minus the value of byproducts; represents the value of the meat to the farmer
Byproduct allowanceValue of hides, skins, fats, bones, and edible and inedible offal
Spreads
Total spreadRetail value minus net farm value
Wholesale to retailRetail value minus wholesale value
Farm to wholesaleWholesale value minus net farm value
Farmers' shareNet farm value divided by retail value
Retail to consumer spread (poultry only)Difference between what the retail grocery store pays for the product (wholesale price plus a delivery charge) and what the store charges the consumer
Market prices
5-market steer price (dollars per hundredweight)Average monthly value for the 5-market steer price as published by AMS, measured in dollars per hundredweight live-weight basis
51-52 percent lean hogs (dollars per hundredweight)Average monthly value for 51-52 percent lean hogs as reported by AMS, converted from carcass weight to live-weight basis
All fresh beef retail price (cents per pound)Composite value based on Choice beef, other beef, and hamburger retail prices; developed to estimate the average retail value of total beef production
Wholesale broiler composite (cents per retail pound)Composite value based on wholesale prices for whole birds and chicken parts; developed to estimate the average retail value of all broiler production
Retail broiler composite (cents per retail pound)Retail value of the composite wholesale value for broilers

Methodology

ERS starts with a standard animal in calculating beef and pork price spreads. This standard animal is cut up in a fixed way at the packing plant, and its wholesale cuts are in turn cut up in a standard way at the retail level. The total value of the animal at the farm could be compared with the total value of the animal at wholesale and retail.

ERS calculates its price spreads on a per-pound-of-retail product basis. It takes 2.40 pounds of the standard steer to produce a pound of retail beef and 1.14 pounds of wholesale beef to produce a pound of retail beef. For hogs, the conversion factors are 1.869 pounds of hog per pound of retail cuts and 1.04 pounds of wholesale cuts per pound of retail cuts. The gross farm values in the price spread tables are the farm price of live animals multiplied by the farm-to-retail conversion factor, and the wholesale values are the average price of the animal's wholesale meat cuts times the wholesale-retail conversion factor.

In addition to their meat, cattle and hogs also produce a number of byproducts when they are slaughtered: organs, bones, hides/skins, etc. ERS does not calculate retail values for these parts, but the price-spread tables do include estimated byproduct values at the wholesale level. The wholesale values and retail values are directly comparable. The byproduct value is subtracted from the gross farm value to produce the net farm value. The net farm value is meant to measure the farm value of an animal's meat.

For more detail on how beef and pork price spreads are calculated and how price spread changes affect livestock prices, see Beef and Pork Values and Prices Spreads Explained (May 2004).

The main difference between broiler spreads and those for beef and pork is that there is no farm price. The vast majority of broilers are produced under contracts, where the integrator (poultry slaughter company) usually supplies chicks and feed and pays growers a per-unit fee for the birds they produce.

sumtab.xls
0.03MB
pork.xls
0.04MB
beef.xls
0.04MB
cuts.xls
0.07MB
history.xls
0.23MB

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