Consumer Beef Sales
In a steer or heifer market beef operation, you
purchase 500 to 600 pound feeder calves after weaning at approximately 7 to 10 months of age. They can then be fed
out and marketed in less than a year from the time of purchase. Thus, the investment on each calf is returned
within a comparatively short time. This type of operation may not require much land, but adequate facilities are
essential so that animals can be kept comfortable and under control.
Consumer Beef Sales is selling food and farm products
directly to consumers without using an intermediary. This may include direct sales to grocery stores, restaurants,
door-to-door and freezer sales and Internet marketing.
According to USDA’s Economic Research Service, general livestock farms
sold less than 1 percent of total livestock sales by means of direct marketing in 1992. More current
information will be available when the 2002 Farm Census is analyzed. More than $3 million in sales was
generated from these sales. Direct marketing of livestock products is not as common as other vegetables and melons,
for example, because livestock require further processing. The percentage of farms with direct sales is higher in
more urbanized counties.
However, consumer beef sales can provide prices for producers higher than
typical wholesale prices, yet below supermarket prices. Interest in food safety, the environment, people wishing to
purchase local products and alternative agriculture has also supported this growth. Consumers enjoy dealing
face-to-face with the producers of the products they are purchasing. This trend relates to traceability and
accountability. The ability to trace a product to the original source is a critical food safety issue and provides
consumers assurance that their food is safe and wholesome because they know the individual who produced it for
them.
Increasing numbers of producers and producer groups are reaching new
consumers using the Internet. With widespread sales of home computers, an estimated 60 percent of the U.S.
population has Internet access. More consumers are shopping over the Internet. According to the U.S. Census Bureau,
total e-commerce sales during 2001 were estimated at $32.6 billion.
Beef that is sold over the Internet must be processed in federally
inspected plants. If the meat is processed in a state inspected facility, it is only legal to sell meat within that
state.
Farmers’ markets continue to grow in the United States. According to the
USDA, there were more than 3,100 farmers’ markets in 2002, an increase of 79 percent from 1994. Farmers’ markets
are beneficial to farm operations that have less than $250,000 in annual receipts.
Direct from the farm Consumer Beef Sales will be affected by the growing
trend of more meals consumed outside of the home. Expenditures on away-from-home food now account for about 47
percent of total U.S. food expenditures. The National Restaurant Association projects away-from-home food
expenditures will exceed at-home food expenditures by 2010. Possible implications and opportunities could be
further explored. Perhaps producer groups will want to consider providing pre-cooked, easy to reheat meat
products, or develop other products that can meet the needs of consumers.
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