By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A recent Mississippi State University study
suggests that Americans don't mind eating beef treated with
growth hormones or fed genetically engineered corn nearly as
much as do European consumers. Jayson
Lusk, assistant professor in MSU's Department of
Agricultural Economics, helped conduct a survey of consumers
in France, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United
States. He worked with Jutta Rossen from the
Louvain-la-Neuve in Belgium and John Fox of Kansas State
University. The
researchers were trying to determine whether consumer
preferences for beef cattle administered growth hormones or
fed genetically engineered corn were different in Europe and
America. They were trying to see how these different
preferences impacted trade policies. "Since
the late 1980s, the United States and the European Union
have been involved in a contentious debate over trade of
beef from cattle that have been implanted with anabolic
growth hormones. The Europeans have banned U.S. imports of
beef since 1989," Lusk said. "Because
the vast majority of fed cattle in the United States are
administered added growth hormones to improve weight gain
and feeding efficiency, U.S. producers have suffered from
the loss of a valuable market," he said. Surveys
found that French consumers were willing to pay
significantly more for beef from cattle not given growth
hormones than were U.S., German or British consumers. It
also found that the European consumers were willing to pay
premium prices for beef from animals not fed genetically
engineered corn. Results
suggest American consumers are willing to pay an additional
$3 per pound for ribeye steaks from cattle not fed
genetically modified corn. Consumers in the three European
countries were willing to pay more than $6 a pound extra for
the same product. Opinions on meat from cattle treated with
hormones were not as divided. "Although
the level of concern for hormone-treated beef was high in
both the United States and the European Union, it was
surprising that Germany, the United Kingdom and the United
States put the same value on this type of meat," Lusk said.
"This suggests there is little support for the argument that
differences in consumer preferences for hormone-treated beef
justify the European Union import ban." The
fact that Europeans surveyed expressed a strong desire not
to buy beef from animals fed genetically modified corn
suggests U.S. exporters will encounter strong resistance to
future efforts to enter these markets with genetically
modified products. Lusk
said the survey results indicate the European Union is
unlikely to open its markets to U.S. beef. This is despite
the fact that the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs
does not allow nontariff trade barriers unless scientific
evidence suggests a product is unsafe. "The
European Union claims that public health concerns constitute
a valid basis for their trade restrictions on
hormone-treated beef and genetically engineered crops," Lusk
said. "However, beef- and grain-exporting countries such as
the United States maintain that the European Union import
ban protects domestic agricultural prices by limiting
international competition and unfairly improves the welfare
of European Union farmers." Released:
April 22, 2002
Mississippi Agricultural
News
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Survey finds
Americans less
picky about beef
Contact: Jayson Lusk, (662) 325-3796
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:00
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an02/020422.html
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