Bacon shortage 'baloney,' but prices to rise

Published: October 9, 2012 

Bacon Shortage

This Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2012 photo shows a package of Bacon at a home in North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. A British farming organization is predicting a worldwide shortage of bacon and pork in 2013. The National Pig Association says global drought conditions are driving up the price of grain, a major staple in hog feed. It says pig farmers around the world are selling their herds because retail prices are not rising fast enough to cover the cost of record-high pig-feed costs. (The Canadian Press, Jonathan Hayward)

Jonathan Hayward — ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bacon lovers can relax. They’ll find all they want on supermarket shelves in the coming months, though their pocketbooks may take a hit.

The economics of the current drought are likely to nose up prices for bacon and other pork products next year, by as much as 10 percent. But U.S. agricultural economists are dismissing reports of a global bacon shortage that lent sizzle to recent headlines and Twitter feeds. Simply put, the talk of scarcity is hogwash.

“Use of the word ‘shortage’ caused visions of (1970s-style) gasoline lines in a lot of people’s heads, and that’s not the case,” said Steve Meyer, a consultant to the National Pork Producers Council and National Pork Board. “If the definition of shortage is that you can’t find it on the shelves, then no, the concern is not valid. If the concern is higher cost for it, then yes.”

Fears about a scarcity of bacon swept across social and mainstream media in recent weeks after Britain’s National Pig Association said a bacon shortage was “unavoidable,” citing a sharp decline in the continent’s pig herd and drought-inflated feed costs. The report caused much consternation over a product that used to be merely a breakfast staple, but nowadays flavors everything from brownies to vodka.

The alarm was quickly dismissed by the American Farm Bureau Federation as “baloney.”

“Pork supplies will decrease slightly as we go into 2013,” Farm Bureau economist John Anderson said. “But the idea that there’ll be widespread shortages, that we’ll run out of pork, that’s really overblown.”

A spokesman for the British pork trade group last week maintained its position that “there will be a significant tightening in the global pigmeat supply” in the second half of 2013, because “the vast majority of pig producers around the world are losing money on every pig they sell.”

“Given the huge amount of interest in the United States created by our earlier press release maybe more producers will now hang on in production, in the hope of recovering their losses next year and in 2014,” Digby Scott told The Associated Press in an email. “We agree with the view of some economists in the (United) States that supplies will tighten and prices will rise BUT maybe you won’t see ‘standing-in-line’ shortages in supermarkets. Time will tell.”

The stubborn drought in the U.S., the world’s biggest supplier of feed grains, undeniably will affect pig production. The Corn Belt’s lack of moisture twice has prompted the U.S. Agriculture Department to slash its forecast for this year’s corn output. The government now expects U.S. production of the grain to amount to 10.8 billion bushels, the least since 2006.

Those lowered expectations sent prices of corn – also used in ethanol, further squeezing supply – to record highs through much of the summer. Feed generally makes up about 60 percent of the expense of raising a pig. Rather than absorb the higher costs, swine and beef producers often have culled their animals by sending them to slaughter.

A pound of sliced bacon cost an average of $4.05 at the nation’s supermarkets, last week, down 22 cents from a week earlier, according to the USDA.

Pig producer Phil Borgicwaves off the concerns about consumers facing shortages.

“The U.S. has plenty of pork, and we won’t run out here,” said Borgic, who has 3,400 sows in central Illinois. “We’ll have some price inflation, but we have plenty of supply.”

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