Food Shortages & Price Increases Ahead?

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The forum discussion centers on the significant food shortages and price increases resulting from the mass euthanization of livestock, particularly by major suppliers like Tyson Foods. Millions of chickens, cows, and pigs are being destroyed due to processing facility closures, leading to a waste of resources and a looming crisis in food supply. The conversation highlights the complexities of the food supply chain, emphasizing the urgent need for government intervention to stabilize food production and distribution amidst the pandemic-induced disruptions.

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Evo
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Even though they are destroying millions of chickens, cows and pigs, this is also going to cause shortages and price increases of all other foods as people have to find alternatives and start hoarding.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/food-supply-chain-breaking-tyson-213539680.html

In a related article, another supplier had euthanized 2 million chickens.

https://www.businessinsider.com/mil...-food-supply-chain-brink-meat-shortage-2020-4

What a waste, what a shame.
 
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Evo said:
What a waste, what a shame.
Sad but true.
Government for the people by the people would help mitigate, prepare and plan food production and distribution. There are many ways to preserve proteins and othern nutrion content originally intended for other venues -- restaurants, international commerce, hotels, etc. -- until demand and supply normalize.

What a tragic unnecessary waste of limited resources; a shadow on the land.
 
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I've also read that all total there are millions of TONS of fresh produce being left to rot because restaurants and other outlets are closed.

And this at a time when, reportedly, food banks are begging for donations.
 
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Surely Tyson doesn’t have a vested interest in whipping up a demand frenzy...

Also, from the Time article:
The Arkansas-based company says food waste is also a threat, as “farmers across the nation simply will not have anywhere to sell their livestock to be processed, when they could have fed the nation.”

“Millions of animals —chickens, pigs and cattle— will be depopulated because of the closure of our processing facilities,” Tyson writes.
Maybe someone more familiar with meat processing can explain the logic here. Aren’t Tyson’s facilities the places where this “depopulation” takes place? If these facilities are shuttered, why does that eliminate the animals? Don’t animals continue to, you know, live when they’re not being sent to the slaughterhouse?
 
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I'll swear that I've seen remarks to the effect that "at any given moment there is food (globally) for two weeks;" i.e., that there is only a two week interruption in production necessary to screw things up thoroughly. Googling "global food supply" + "amount on hand" in a variety of permutations has failed to yield a result.

When producers can't get products to market... Shades of the "Irish Potato Famine," very local, gone global.
 
TeethWhitener said:
Don’t animals continue to, you know, live when they’re not being sent to the slaughterhouse?
Yep, they sure do and they are HUNGRY critters. You want to pay to feed them out of the goodness of your heart? Thousands of them? And pay the workers that handle the feed and the feeding machines? And keep them clean and free from disease? Large processors are in business to make money, not because they love animals or because the love losing money.
 
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TeethWhitener said:
Don’t animals continue to, you know, live when they’re not being sent to the slaughterhouse?
phinds said:
Yep, they sure do and they are HUNGRY critters.
They also procreate and go through their planned life-cycles. For cows it takes something like two years, and you can't just press pause on that process. I'm sure they have absorbed as much extra holding capacity as they can.

And we eat (and therefore breed) 25 million chickens per day in the US.

At least with our oil glut we can literally turn off the tap.
 
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phinds said:
Yep, they sure do and they are HUNGRY critters. You want to pay to feed them out of the goodness of your heart? Thousands of them? And pay the workers that handle the feed and the feeding machines? And keep them clean and free from disease? Large processors are in business to make money, not because they love animals or because the love losing money.
So is it cheaper just to kill/let the animals die and start from scratch after the pandemic than to keep the animals alive and resume slaughtering once the pandemic ebbs enough to restaff the slaughterhouses?
 
TeethWhitener said:
So is it cheaper just to kill/let the animals die and start from scratch after the pandemic than to keep the animals alive and resume slaughtering once the pandemic ebbs enough to restaff the slaughterhouses?
Don't you think processors would do that it if it was profitable? If it is in some cases, they will, otherwise ... FOLLOW THE MONEY.
 
  • #10
phinds said:
Don't you think processors would do that it if it was profitable?
Which?
 
  • #11
I agree that businesses will seek to maximize their profit. I just find it surprising in this case that maximizing their profit consists essentially of taking a blowtorch to their inventory.
 
  • #12
TeethWhitener said:
I agree that businesses will seek to maximize their profit. I just find it surprising in this case that maximizing their profit consists essentially of taking a blowtorch to their inventory.
Oh, it's worse than that. They have to lay off people who were taking care of the animals and machines and then eventually hire new ones (maybe some of the same, so good, but maybe some new so bad because of training issues and lack of experience). They may also lose supply chain contracts both for what they sell and for what they need to buy.

Also, it's NOT "taking a blowtorch to their inventory". If the inventory were in a warehouse they owned they could just turn off the lights. In this case they have the expenses I mentioned, so not the same thing at all.
 
  • #13
phinds said:
Also, it's NOT "taking a blowtorch to their inventory". If the inventory were in a warehouse they owned they could just turn off the lights. In this case they have the expenses I mentioned, so not the same thing at all.
Now I’m very confused. I guess I’m just too dense for subtlety, so you’re going to have to be as straight as possible with me. By “inventory,” I meant the animals. Are you saying that the animals will be kept alive?
 
  • #14
TeethWhitener said:
will be kept alive?
I'll answer for Paul, since he's stepped out for a moment; "No. Whatever costs money and yields no return on the investment goes."
 
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  • #15
TeethWhitener said:
Now I’m very confused. I guess I’m just too dense for subtlety, so you’re going to have to be as straight as possible with me. By “inventory,” I meant the animals. Are you saying that the animals will be kept alive?
No, I'm saying that if the "inventory" were boxes of cereal and it were stored in a warehouse that they owned, they would not take a blowtorch to it, they would just leave it there, turn off the lights and lock the door. They wouldn't destroy it because there's no cost to keeping it. You seem to be finding it difficult to accept that keeping live animals is expensive.
 
  • #16
phinds said:
You seem to be finding it difficult to accept that keeping live animals is expensive.
No I find it surprising that it costs more than kiboshing the whole operation and starting over from scratch.
 
  • #17
TeethWhitener said:
No I find it surprising that it costs more than kiboshing the whole operation and starting over from scratch.
I agree
 
  • #18
TeethWhitener said:
kiboshing the whole operation and starting over from scratch.
Depends; you're a rancher fattenning cattle for slaughter, you're a rancher breeding cattle for slaughter, you're a "rancher" renting pasture to run cattle on; three different business models.
 
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  • #19
TeethWhitener said:
I agree that businesses will seek to maximize their profit. I just find it surprising in this case that maximizing their profit consists essentially of taking a blowtorch to their inventory.
"cash flow"
 
  • #20
TeethWhitener said:
No I find it surprising that it costs more than kiboshing the whole operation and starting over from scratch.
It is not a kibishing of the whole operation.
It is a re-adjustment, due to supply and demand, with some extreme bottlenecks thrown into compound the situation facing producers and processors.
Right now there is oversupply in the restaurant and culinary side of the food supply - exactly pretty much a complete drop in demand in that side of the food chain due to the closures of the restaurants.

Some producers and processors exist exclusively with contracts to that part of the chain. Since that demand has dried up, they have two choices - try to sell to the grocery side of the market at reduced price, or reduce their production through either "natural means" ( reduced births of animals or delayed planting or harvesting of crops - the continuation of a herd or the planting and harvesting, as mentioned, requires manpower which is not available for many reasons, so the farmer may be limited in choice ), or euthanization. After all, farmers themselves do not have unlimited resources to house, feed and take care of animals and produce.

The closures for the food processing plants has added another dimensional effect to the food supply.
If they do have a product, they may now not have any where to sell, or at the very least, limited options to sell.

This explains it much better, and one can see where the depopulation come about.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...d-as-pandemic-slams-meat-sector-idUSKCN2292YS

Yes. it is a shame.
But the food supply is tweaked to run at a certain throttle.
An unexpected reduction of the throttle has thrown the system into turmoil, but at the present moment not into complete chaos, The producers and processing plants still exist.
When we start seeing bankruptcies and complete elimination of these businesses, then do start to completely worry.

Thank Tyson for bringing the problem to the for front.
 
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  • #21
It seems to me, that adequate food production would be a priority, in order to insure that everyone has enough to eat, and the govornment would subsidise food producers to a certain degree as to maintain a level of stability. Because, obviously, a food shortage will result in so many unpleasant and uncontrollable scenarios, that I have no doubt would be much more difficult and expensive to manage than the"books"and the inventory.
 
  • #22
It seems we are learning what a planned economy looks like - without all that planning.
 
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  • #23
A planned economy? By that do you mean that this"pandemic" is either planned, or being used to force a modified economic system into existence? I foresee it being used to expedite the eradication of physical currency, and hurry into practice the inevitable exclusive form of trade and commerce entirely digital and electronic, which in turn will allow the powers that be considerable more power over the masses, and the resources we all need to live. Food, being the main concern. And whoever controls the food supply and distribution, will also control the people to a large degree. Shortages would probably cause riots and panic, but rations would reward obedience and conformity as an alternative to civil unrest that could risk food availability to potential dissidents.
 
  • #24
Bobsweslay said:
A planned economy? By that do you mean that this"pandemic" is either planned, or being used to force a modified economic system into existence?
No. That is not what he is saying.

In #21, you yourself suggested how you thought the economy should be run. That "adequate food production should be a priority". That's a planned economy. You would have someone (government, perhaps) making decisions about how to prioritize allocation of resources so that food production is not threatened by events such as these.

@Vanadium 50 was making the somewhat ironic suggestion that the current situation with individuals making locally reasonable but globally problematic decisions is the kind of thing that could result from a planned economy with inadequate planning. An object lesson, if you will.

No, it is not being suggested that some sort of diabolical plan is in action. It is not even about individuals behaving stupidly. It is the invisible hand of the market made visible.
 
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  • #25
Bobsweslay said:
I foresee it being used to ... hurry into practice the inevitable exclusive form of trade and commerce entirely digital and electronic
? You think all trade and commeerce is going to become entirely digital and electronic? Now, that's just nonsense. Perhaps I am misunderstanding what you mean.
 
  • #26
256bits said:
Some producers and processors exist exclusively with contracts to that part of the chain.
This is interesting. The Reuters article you posted stated that the producers aren’t “geared up” to supply grocery stores, which suggests that the process of slaughtering/butchering/etc. is different for grocery stores than it is for restaurants (or—maybe more likely—the logistics of the supply channels would require an unwieldy adjustment). But here you seem to suggest that it’s a matter of contract law, not physical ability of getting the animals slaughtered and to a point of sale. Do you mind clarifying if it’s one, the other, or both?

Edit: there’s some more info further down in the article. Things like liquid eggs or readymade eggs tend to go to restaurants (think the egg in an egg McMuffin), while eggs in cartons (which are also suffering a shortage right now) have to be graded and packed to go to grocery stores.
 
  • #27
One thing that would likely be different is packaging since restaurants don't need things packed to individual serving sizes but grocery stores do.
 
  • #28
phinds said:
One thing that would likely be different is packaging since restaurants don't need things packed to individual serving sizes but grocery stores do.
This also kind of surprises me, in a few different ways. A lot of restaurants do receive meat portioned into individual sizes (though maybe not packed that way): think burger patties that fast food restaurants sell by the billion. But now my question is: how involved are the primary producers (farmers, ranchers) in packaging their products? Clearly the animals have to be slaughtered before they’re smooshed into patties. The eggs have to be laid before they’re liquefied. The switch from restaurants to grocery stores should really only affect farmers indirectly. The real effects would be further up the supply chain. I see why shutting down a processing plant is a big deal, because it closes a channel for the farmers’ goods. But the restaurant/grocery thing is a little beyond me.
 
  • #29
TeethWhitener said:
fast food restaurants sell by the billion
I was strictly thinking of places that I think of as restaurants, not junk food emporiums but the junk food places do likely sell more combined than actual restaurants do so you make a good point.
 
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