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M-COOL Takes Toll on U.S. Pork Producers Who Buy Canadian Origin Pigs
Dr. Steve Meyer - Paragon Economics

Farmscape for May 22, 2012   (Episode 5154)

The president of Paragon Economics says Mandatory U.S. Country of Origin Labelling has taken its greatest toll on U.S. pork producers who have typically relied on imported Canadian weanling and feeder pigs.

In Early May the World Trade Organization Appellate Body heard an appeal by United States of a November 2011 WTO ruling that U.S. Mandatory Country of Origin Labelling affords U.S. produced livestock preferential treatment and violates U.S. trade obligations.

A ruling on that appeal is expected in July.

Paragon Economics President Dr. Steve Meyer recalls, when the law came into effect in the fall of 2008, it prompted some U.S. pork processors to stop purchasing Canadian origin pigs.


Clip-Dr. Steve Meyer-Paragon Economics:
It really hit the U.S. pork producers, obviously the ones that were importing feeder pigs and weaned pigs for feeding here in the U.S., because they had to be segregated and slaughtered and the product from them either labelled differently as being a product of Canada and the U.S. instead of product of the U.S. or that product had to be shunted into areas where the labelling didn't apply.

This labelling only applies for retail fresh non-processed product.

If you take a pig that originated in Canada, fed him in the United States you could take the product from that that is either spiced or seasoned or smoked or cured plus any fresh product that might go into food service and you may not have to label any of it.

That's a possibility and so those producers that were buying those pigs, they had to jump through some hoops to deliver pigs at certain times to packers, packers put some cost differential we think on those pigs.

USDA never found that to be significant across the board but we think there were spots where there were some price discrimination there because the pigs cost more to handle.

They had to be segregated.


Dr. Meyer notes the National Pork Producers Council has called for repeal of Mandatory COOL but that hasn't happened and now the situation with the World Trade Organization has to be dealt with.

For Farmscape.Ca, I'm Bruce Cochrane.

       *Farmscape is a presentation of Sask Pork and Manitoba Pork Council

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