The ongoing dispute has centered in large part around diverse views on underlying economic impacts on stakeholders throughout the meat and livestock supply chain.

Associate Professor / Department of Agricultural Economics / Kansas State University

The U.S. filed an appeal this past week to WTO's recent ruling against MCOOL, which in turn reignites interest in information providing insight into the impacts of MCOOL. Given this update, it is useful to take note of a November 2014 survey coordinated at Oklahoma State University. This survey provides the only known academic research on consumer awareness and response of details specific to the 2013 MCOOL rule.

To assess if stated consumer willingness-to-pay (WTP) varies across products with labels that changed in the 2013 MCOOL rule, survey respondents were randomly assigned to one of four treatments that differed in presented labeled products. One-fourth of participants were asked: “What is the most you would be willing to pay for a 12-ounce boneless ribeye beef steak that was labeled as ‘born, raised and slaughtered in the U.S.’?”

Other respondents answered similar questions, except the labels were changed to “born in Canada, raised and slaughtered in U.S.”; “born and raised in Canada, slaughtered in the U.S.”; or “product of Canada and the U.S.” Point estimates of WTP were highest on the “born, raised and slaughtered in the U.S.” product, consistent with past stated preference research.

A deeper assessment of whether WTP values across labels are statistically different is important. Results show consumers do not distinguish between beef from animals born in Canada (then raised and processed in the U.S.) and beef from cattle born and raised in Canada (then processed in the U.S.). Respondents also did not place different values on these two labeled products than ribeyes labeled as “product of Canada and the U.S.”

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This lack of statistical difference in WTP is critical given the 2013 MCOOL rule that led to the “product of Canada and the U.S.” label being replaced with beef labels including “born in Canada, raised and slaughtered in U.S.” and “born and raised in Canada, slaughtered in the U.S.” These are specific impacts of the 2013 MCOOL rule, relative to the existing 2009 rule, that included the introduction of born, raised and slaughtered specificity and a removal of labels such as “product of Canada and the U.S.”

The November survey also found that only 22 percent, 28 percent and 24 percent of respondents were aware that grocery stores are required by law to label fresh meat products with the country where the animal was born, raised and slaughtered (respectively). Finding the largest share of respondents indicating they did not know about these requirements is consistent with an earlier study and should be appreciated in analyses of demand benefits of MCOOL.

This limited awareness related to current MCOOL specific details is consistent with several studies finding the origin of meat products to be less important to U.S. consumers than several other values including price, safety, taste and nutrition.

It is hard to predict the future of any policy, making it difficult to assess the endgame following the U.S. announcement to appeal WTO's recent decision. The aim of this short article is to aide in highlighting recent academic research germane to the broader MCOOL issue.

Glynn Tonsor is an associate professor at Kansas State University, Department of Agricultural Economics. This article originally appeared in the In The Cattle Markets newsletter.

References omitted but available upon request. Email editor@progressivecattleman.com.