Murgen
Murgen I do not think that is wrong at all.
The problem in the Pickett case was that Tyson could get just as good quality from the cash market for less money than they were paying in the captive supplies and they did not do this. They did not do it because they could use the captive supplies they had and drive down the cash market. Since much of the captive supply price was based on the cash market, they were able to lower overall prices to cattlemen, not based on the efficiencies of captive supplies, but by using a buying strategy that lowered their overall costs.
Essentially, they divided the total market for beef and then played a little game on the sellers. This reduced their overall price paid (and the price paid by other packers) for cattle that was not based on supply/demand but on a deceptive practice. The key the plaintiff had to prove was that the cash market had a value that was undervalued due to the above game. If there were more packers than just a few, this game would not have worked because competitive markets would have bid the cash price for cattle up and there would not have been an artificial movement down the supply curve.
The cattle market can give all the benefits to the packers you described above with price signals. If angus cattle are preferred more by consumers then the packers can pay more for them and more cattle ranchers would see the premium and produce for it. Same with prime, choice, or whatever the market demands.
The PSA was written not to frustrate efficiency, but frustrate the abuses of market power. The definition of efficiency is not Tyson's definition of efficiency, but the economy's efficiency. The economy's efficiency includes the farmer's definition of efficiency and not just the packers. Tyson is already abusing its market power in the poultry markets with its poultry farmers and nothing is being done about it. With more market power they will do the same in beef. It is just a matter of time.
I have never advocated the doing away with contracts that promote efficiency--but the definition of efficiency must not belong only to Tyson or the other packers. When the abuse of contracts is found out and shown, it is understandable that the vehicle for the fraud be taken away. Just as you would take the license away from a drunk driver. The law should not be concerned with the driver not being able to go to work "efficiently in his own car". The drunk driver should have thought about that when he drove drunk. If that puts Tyson at a competitive disadvantage so what? That is part of the penalty to be paid.
The Tysons of this world are drunk with market power and no one is taking their keys away from them. What do we need-- Mothers Against Market Power? The inefficiencies that market power produces is paid by producers. That cost shifting should be shifted back to the ones who broke the law, took the producer surplus and played robin hood with it as to consumer surplus. That robin hood game made barriers to entry that will further help the industry consolidate and become more concentrated.
As my first post on this forum explained, the economy has a net loss when this game is played.
Thanks for your info. on the Canadian beef company.
I agree with you Econ101. It is a true benefit to the packers to lock up their supply of a superior, consistent raw product. In contrast to buying on the spot market and gambling on quality. Is that wrong?
Murgen I do not think that is wrong at all.
The problem in the Pickett case was that Tyson could get just as good quality from the cash market for less money than they were paying in the captive supplies and they did not do this. They did not do it because they could use the captive supplies they had and drive down the cash market. Since much of the captive supply price was based on the cash market, they were able to lower overall prices to cattlemen, not based on the efficiencies of captive supplies, but by using a buying strategy that lowered their overall costs.
Essentially, they divided the total market for beef and then played a little game on the sellers. This reduced their overall price paid (and the price paid by other packers) for cattle that was not based on supply/demand but on a deceptive practice. The key the plaintiff had to prove was that the cash market had a value that was undervalued due to the above game. If there were more packers than just a few, this game would not have worked because competitive markets would have bid the cash price for cattle up and there would not have been an artificial movement down the supply curve.
The cattle market can give all the benefits to the packers you described above with price signals. If angus cattle are preferred more by consumers then the packers can pay more for them and more cattle ranchers would see the premium and produce for it. Same with prime, choice, or whatever the market demands.
The PSA was written not to frustrate efficiency, but frustrate the abuses of market power. The definition of efficiency is not Tyson's definition of efficiency, but the economy's efficiency. The economy's efficiency includes the farmer's definition of efficiency and not just the packers. Tyson is already abusing its market power in the poultry markets with its poultry farmers and nothing is being done about it. With more market power they will do the same in beef. It is just a matter of time.
I have never advocated the doing away with contracts that promote efficiency--but the definition of efficiency must not belong only to Tyson or the other packers. When the abuse of contracts is found out and shown, it is understandable that the vehicle for the fraud be taken away. Just as you would take the license away from a drunk driver. The law should not be concerned with the driver not being able to go to work "efficiently in his own car". The drunk driver should have thought about that when he drove drunk. If that puts Tyson at a competitive disadvantage so what? That is part of the penalty to be paid.
The Tysons of this world are drunk with market power and no one is taking their keys away from them. What do we need-- Mothers Against Market Power? The inefficiencies that market power produces is paid by producers. That cost shifting should be shifted back to the ones who broke the law, took the producer surplus and played robin hood with it as to consumer surplus. That robin hood game made barriers to entry that will further help the industry consolidate and become more concentrated.
As my first post on this forum explained, the economy has a net loss when this game is played.
Thanks for your info. on the Canadian beef company.