Projects and Presentations (Cont'd)
95-1 Generic and Price Effects of New Product Promotion in the California
Almond Industry(Carman @ University of California, Davis) - This project
was completed on December 31, 1996. The objective was to develop estimates
of the impact of producer-financed advertising and promotion on the demand
for California almonds, and the effects on producer returns in both the short
and long run. The econometric model was specified, including advertising,
and estimated using two sets of advertising data. The first series for
advertising was the fiscal year advertising and promotion expenses for Blue
Diamond and the second was calendar year consumer media advertising by Blue
Diamond and Dole nuts (collected by LNA). The initial results indicated that
advertising had a significant positive effect on the demand for almonds.
However, there was some concern of possible specification problems and future
work will focus on correcting these problems.
95-2 Evaluating U.S. Market Promotion Expenditures in the Japanese Beef
Market (Mittelhammer and Wahl @ Washington State University) - This study
will be completed in September of 1996. The primary objective of the project
is to evaluate the significance and quantify the effectiveness of MPP/TEA
expenditures on promoting and advertising U.S. beef in the Japanese market.
An inverse AIDS demand model was developed which disaggregated beef, pork,
and chicken commodities into groups based upon origin, including U.S., non-U.S.,
and domestic (Japanese) origin. The results from all scenarios imply that
there is a positive and statistically significant effect of MPP advertising
and promotion efforts on Japanese demand for U.S. beef. On the other hand,
the effects of MPP advertising and promotion are uniformly insignificant
for pork and chicken. In the case of beef, and for the model incorporating
only current advertising/promotion efforts, the advertising/promotion coefficient
was estimated to be .641. For the model incorporating the partial adjustment
mechanism for representing the impact of advertising/promotion, the partial
adjustment coefficient was estimated to be .76, with the effect of past
advertising/promotion efforts then geometrically declining year by year.
Publications:
Comeau, A., R. C. Mittelhammer, and T. I. Wahl. "Assessing the Effectiveness
of MPP Meat Advertising and Promotion in the Japanese Market." Paper Submitted
at the American Agricultural Economics Association Summer Meetings held in
Toronto, Canada, 1997.
Comeau, A., R. C. Mittelhammer, and T. I. Wahl. "Assessing the Effectiveness
of MPP Meat Advertising and Promotion in the Japanese Market." NICPRE Research
Bulletin 96-20, National Institute for Commodity Promotion Research and
Evaluation Research Bulletin Cornell University, December 1996.
95-3 Linkage of Generic and Brand Advertising: Understanding the Fundamental
Differences in a Commodity Market (Ward and Lee @ University of Florida)
- Project was completed on September 30, 1996. This research identified the
economic situations where the individual could more effectively impact his/her
demand relative to what could be achieved collectively. A theoretical model
of industry supply and demand was set forth where checkoff dollars were already
incorporated into the demand function. Individual demands for some firms
were adjusted as brand advertising was incorporated into the models. While
this was not an empirical analysis in the traditional framework, using the
theoretical framework and assumed responses, numerous situations were simulated
altering the assumptions (parameters and number n).
Publications:
Ward, Ronald W. "Advertising and Promotions," in Agro-Food Marketing.
Wallingford: CAB International, 1997.
Ward, Ronald W. "Commodity Promotions: A Global View," in Agricultural
Commodity Promotion Policies and Programs in the Global Agri-Food System.
Ferrero, Ackerman, and Nichols (eds). Proceedings of the NEC-63 Conference
held May 26-27, 1996 in Cancun, Mexico. Ithaca: NICPRE, 1996.
Ward, Ronald W. "Institutional Setting and Issues: Discussant," in Economic
Analysis of Meat Promotion. Kinnucan, Lenz, and Clary (eds). Proceedings
of the NEC-63 Conference held June 2-3, 1995 in Denver, Colorado. Ithaca:
NICPRE, 1995.
Ward, Ronald W. "Economic Returns from the Beef Checkoff." NICPRE
Quarterly 1(1995):1-3.
Ward, Ronald W. and Wanki Moon. "Evaluating the U.S. Beef Checkoff: An
Alternative Approach," in Economic Analysis of Meat Promotion. Kinnucan,
Lenz, and Clary (eds). Proceedings of the NEC-63 Conference held June 2-3,
1995 in Denver, Colorado. Ithaca: NICPRE, 1995.
95-4 Measurement of Agricultural Producer Attitudes Toward Commodity Checkoff
Programs (Clary @ New Mexico State University) - A continuing project
until June 1997. The objectives are to: (i) evaluate farmer/rancher attitudes
toward commodity promotion programs and commodity checkoff boards; (ii) determine
willingness to contribute funding for these programs; (iii) determine the
average number of programs that a producer financially supports; (iv) evaluate
whether attitudes toward commodity checkoff programs are tied to the number
of programs supported by a producer; and (v) determine the extent to which
demographic and/or psychographic characteristics can be used to predict support
for checkoff programs. Survey participants will be chosen from a purchased
list of randomly selected U.S. agricultural producers. Literature from the
psychology and marketing fields is being examined to identify possible
psychological segmentation constructs. The survey is scheduled for January
1996. A random sample of U.S. producers will be conducted by mail to determine
their attitudes and support for checkoff programs. Analysis will be conducted
to determine factors that explain differences.
Publications:
Villasenor, Martha, Cynda R. Clary, and Robert Steiner. "U.S. Agricultural
Producer Attitudes Toward Commodity Checkoff," in Economic Evaluation
of Commodity Promotion Programs in the Current Legal and Political
Environment. Ferrero and Clary (eds). Proceedings of the NEC-63 Conference
held October 7-8, 1996 in Monterey, California. Ithaca: NICPRE, 1997.
95-5 Optimality of U.S. Pork Export Promotion Program in Japan (Liu @
University of Minnesota and Kaiser @ Cornell University) - A continuing
project since FY95. The objective of the research is to develop a model to
determine the optimal level of U.S. export promotion activities in Japan
given competition and strategic interaction among major exporting countries.
A literature review has been conducted in the area of economic analysis of
commodity promotion and in the area of Japanese meat marketing. The next
step is to develop and simulate the impacts of a two-stage subgame perfect
model. In the second stage of the model, exporting firms choose their decision
variables, given the demand conditions for their products in Japan. In the
first stage, the commodity organization attempts to shift the demand in favor
of its constituents by choosing the optimal level of export promotion activities,
given the optimal rule to be played out in the second stage of the game.
Publications:
Liu, Donald J. "Strategic Export Promotion: An Introduction," in New
Methodologies for Commodity Promotion Economics. Kaiser, Kinnucan, and
Ferrero (eds). Proceedings of the NEC-63 Conference held October 5-6, 1995
in Sacramento, California. Ithaca: NICPRE, 1996.
95-6 U.S. Export Promotion of Bulk Products: Analysis of Federal Wheat
Programs (Henneberry @ Oklahoma State University) - A continuing project
in FY96. The objective of this research is to evaluate the effectiveness
of U.S. export promotion programs--the Cooperator Market Development Program
(CMDP) and the Market Promotion Program (MPP)--on U.S. exports of wheat to
selected countries. Econometric models have been constructed to estimate
the impacts of promotion expenditures on U.S. market shares. The models include
Double-log (Cobb-Douglas), Linear, Translog, and AIDS. The endogenous variables
in the first three models are U.S. exports of wheat to the selected markets.
The exogenous variables are U.S. and other exporters' wheat prices, rice
price, the importing country's GDP, nonprice export promotion variables,
and intercept dummy variables. Pooled time-series cross sectional data are
used to analyze the period of 1973 through 1993. In addition to FAS contribution
to CMDP and MPP, second and third party contributions were also included.
96-1 Demand Response to Advertising: Methodology and Applications to
Commodities of Importance to California (Alston @ University of California,
Davis) - A new project in FY96 to be completed during the period October
1, 1995 to September 30, 1997. The objective of this study is to develop
improved methods and measures of the benefits and costs of generic commodity
advertising and promotion programs, and to apply those methods to evaluate
generic advertising and promotion of agricultural commodities important to
California. To date, an econometric study of the California Table Grape industry
has been completed, which has been submitted for publication to the Giannini
Foundation, and two other papers have been submitted to journals for review.
A primary purpose for this project is to develop a new demand system and
a new data set on U.S. meat consumption to apply a new model.
Publications:
Alston, J. M., J. A. Chalfant, and N. E. Piggott. "Advertising and Consumer
Welfare: Scaling versus Translating." Paper Presented to the 41st Annual
Conference of Australian Agricultural and Resource Economics Society held
January 20-25, 1997 in Gold Coast.
Alston, J. M., J. A. Chalfant, and N. E. Piggott. "Advertising and Consumer
Welfare." Presented at the NEC-63 Conference held October 7-8, 1996 in Monterey,
California.
Alston, J. M., J. A. Chalfant, and N. E. Piggott. "Demand Response and Returns
to Incremental Advertising in the Australian Meat Industry," in Economic
Analysis of Meat Promotion. Kinnucan, Lenz, and Clary (eds). Proceedings
of the NEC-63 Conference held June 2-3, 1995 in Denver, Colorado. Ithaca:
NICPRE, 1995.
Alston, J. M., J. A. Chalfant, J. E. Christian, E. Meng, and N. E. Piggott.
"The California Table Grape Commission's Promotion Program: An Evaluation,"
in a forthcoming Giannini Foundation Monograph.
Alston, J.M., J.A. Chalfant, J.E. Christian, E. Meng, and N.E. Piggott. "The
California Table Grape Commission's Promotion Program: Overview and Summary,"
in Economic Evaluation of Commodity Promotion Programs in the Current
Legal and Political Environment. Ferrero and Clary (eds). Proceedings
of the NEC-63 Conference held October 7-8, 1996 in Monterey, California.
Ithaca: NICPRE, 1997.
Piggott, N. E. "Demand Response to Advertising in the Australian Meat Industry."
NICPRE Research Bulletin 96-02, National Institute for Commodity Promotion
Research and Evaluation, Cornell University, July 1996.
96-2 Survey of Commodity Promotion Organizations (Lenz @ Cornell University
and Kinnucan @ Auburn University) - A new project in FY96 that will be
completed by December 1996. The objective of this survey is to determine
the number of commodity promotion organizations in existence in the United
States and to determine their source of funding, the nature of their programs,
and the way they are organized to achieve their objectives. A comparison
with an earlier survey conducted in 1990 will determine the changes that
have occurred over a period of five years. The survey has been completed.
The responses are currently being summarized.
96-3 Ex Post Analysis of Generic Egg Advertising in the United States
(Kaiser, Reberte, and Schmit @ Cornell University) - A new project in
FY96 that was completed in August 1996. The objective of the project was
to evaluate the impact of generic egg advertising in the United States on
egg prices, production, and net producer revenue. The findings indicated
that the generic egg advertising had a positive and statistically significant
impact on the farm egg price. Generic egg advertising led to a substantial
increase in producer net revenue, and the marginal rate of return, which
is the ratio of the increase in net revenue to the cost of the advertising
program from 1990 to 1995, was 4.69.
Publications:
Reberte, J. Carlos, Todd M. Schmit, and Harry M. Kaiser. "An Ex Post Evaluation
of Generic Egg Advertising in the U.S.," in Economic Evaluation of Commodity
Promotion Programs in the Current Legal and Political Environment. Ferrero
and Clary (eds). Proceedings of the NEC- 63 conference held October 7-8,
1997 in Monterey, California. Ithaca: NICPRE, 1997.
Reberte, J. Carlos, Todd M. Schmit, and Harry M. Kaiser. "An Ex Post Evaluation
of Generic Egg Advertising in the U.S." NICPRE Quarterly 7(1996):1-2.
Reberte, J. Carlos, Todd M. Schmit, and Harry M. Kaiser. "An Ex Post Evaluation
of Generic Egg Advertising in the U.S." Report Given to the American Egg
Board in July 1996 at Cornell University.
Reberte, J. Carlos, Todd M. Schmit, and Harry M. Kaiser. "An Ex Post Evaluation
of Generic Egg Advertising in the U.S." Paper Presented at the Annual Conference
of the Western Economic Association International Association on July 1,
1996 in San Francisco, California.
96-4 Economic Analysis of Generic Egg Advertising in California (Kaiser,
Schmit, and Reberte @ Cornell University) - A new project in FY96 that
was completed in August 1996. Money spent on generic egg advertising in
California had a positive and statistically significant impact on egg prices
over the ten-year period. The model indicated that a 1 percent increase in
advertising expenditure resulted in an average increase of 0.13 percent in
the producer egg price, holding all other demand factors constant. Furthermore,
a 1 percent increase in real advertising expenditures resulted in a $2.1
million increase in producer net revenue over the period, 1985-95. This
translated into a marginal rate of return of 7.0.
Publications:
Schmit, Todd M., J. Carlos Reberte, and Harry M. Kaiser. "An Economic Evaluation
of Generic Egg Advertising in California, 1985-95," in Economic Evaluation
of Commodity Promotion Programs in the Current Legal and Political
Environment. Ferrero and Clary (eds). Proceedings of the NEC-63 Conference
held October 7-8, 1996 in Monterey, California. Ithaca: NICPRE, 1997.
Schmit, Todd M., J. Carlos Reberte, and Harry M. Kaiser. "An Economic Evaluation
of Generic Egg Advertising in California, 1985-95." NICPRE Quarterly
7(1996):2.
Schmit, Todd M., J. Carlos Reberte, and Harry M. Kaiser. "An Economic Analysis
of Generic Egg Advertising in California, 1985-95." Report Given to the
California Egg Commission in July 1996 at Cornell University.
Schmit, Todd M., Carlos Reberte, and Harry M. Kaiser. "An Economic Analysis
of Generic Egg Advertising in California, 1985-95." Agribusiness
(forthcoming).
97-1 Predicting Participation in Commodity Checkoffs under Voluntary Programs:
An Experimental Economics Approach (Kaiser and Schulze @ Cornell
University) - This is a new project in FY97. With the courts reviewing
the constitutionality of mandatory commodity checkoff programs, it is possible
that these programs will revert back to being voluntary. Therefore, it is
important to determine what participation would be, or, alternatively, what
free-ridership would be under alternative voluntary institutional arrangements.
This project will use experiments to measure participation in voluntary checkoffs
under a variety of institutional settings including mandatory programs with
refunds, continuous fee structures, and traditional voluntary programs.
97-2 The Economics of Milk Advertising with Changes in International Dairy
Policy (de Gorter and Kaiser @ Cornell University) - This is a new project
beginning in FY97. The goal is to determine the analytical and empirical
implications of milk advertising with the current and potential policy changes
facing the U.S. dairy sector. Kaiser's econometric model of the national
dairy industry will be calibrated to assess the empirical effects while a
standard trade model will be developed with advertising to assess the analytical
effects of policy changes.
97-3 Mandatory Commodity Promotion and the Allocation of Producer Levies
(Holloway @ University of California, Davis) - This is a new project
beginning in FY97. This project derives rules for optimal allocation of farm
checkoff revenue, links the rules to observable characteristics of the food
marketing industries, and derives empirically refutable propositions about
the optimal receipt and disbursement of levies collected for the purpose
of funding downstream research and promotion activities.
97-4 A Comparison of Alternative Methods of Estimating Rates of Return
to Promotion (Davis and Nichols @ Texas A&M University) - This is
a new project beginning in FY97. This project will compare and assess alternative
methods of calculating and estimating rates of return to promotion activities.
This methodological study will examine the impact of omitted variables and
measurement misspecification on rate of return estimates. This is important
in order to see how sensitive rates of return are to model misspecification.
97-5 Free-Riders in Commodity Research and Promotion Programs (Tilly and
Henneberry @ Oklahoma State University) - This is a new project beginning
in FY97. The objective of this study will be to identify economic conditions,
social behaviors, demographic characteristics, information status, and attitudes
of producers that are related to requests for refunds of producer contributions
to the wheat checkoff program in Oklahoma and Kansas. The data for the analysis
will be generated by a mail survey of producers requesting refunds in these
two states.
97-6 Economic Analysis of USDA's Subsidy Programs for Nonprice Export
Promotion (Kinnucan @ Auburn University) - This is a new project beginning
in FY97. This project has three broad objectives. First, to determine the
differential impact of technical assistance, trade servicing, and consumer
promotions on producer welfare. Second, to construct a "promotability index"
to guide allocation decisions across commodities. Finally, to determine the
impact of subsidies for export promotion on industry investment in domestic
and export promotion.
Publications:
Kinnucan, H. W. and H. Xiao. "A Theory of Nonprice Export Promotion with
Application to USDA's Subsidy Programs." NICPRE Research Bulletin 96-09,
National Institute for Commodity Promotion Research and Evaluation, Cornell
University, 1996 (also in review with American Journal of Agricultural
Economics).
Xiao, H. and H. W. Kinnucan. "Distributions of Gains from Alternative Export
Promotion: Strategies in Multi-Stage Production System." (unpublished
manuscript).
97-7 Rates of Return on Individual vs. Collective Promotions (Alston @
University of California, Davis) - This is a new project beginning in
FY97. This project will examine issues associated with examining whether
rates of return for promotion and advertising activities are higher for
individual vs. collective action by producers.
97-8 NEC-63 Proceedings (Various editors @ various institutions) -
This ongoing project publishes proceedings from the various conferences of
NEC-63 from 1994 to present.
Publications:
Ferrero, J.L., K.Z. Ackerman, and J.P. Nichols (eds). Agricultural Commodity
Promotion Policies and Programs. Proceedings of the NEC-63 Conference
held May 26-27, 1996 in Cancun, Mexico. Ithaca: NICPRE, 1996.
Goddard, E.W. and D.S. Taylor (eds). Promotion in the Marketing Mix: What
Works, Where and Why. Proceedings of the NEC-63 conference held April
28-29, 1994 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Guelph: University of Guelph, 1994.
Kaiser, H.M., H.W. Kinnucan, and J.L. Ferrero (eds). New Methodologies
for Commodity Promotion Economics. Proceedings of the NEC-63 Conference
held October 5-6, 1995 in Sacramento, California. Ithaca: NICPRE, 1996.
Kinnucan, H.W., J.E. Lenz, and C.R. Clary (eds). Economic Analysis of
Meat Promotion. Proceedings of NEC-63 Conference held June 2-3, 1995
in Denver, Colorado. Ithaca: NICPRE, 1995.
Nichols, J.P., H.W. Kinnucan, and K.Z. Ackerman (eds). Economic Effects
of Generic Promotion Programs for Agricultural Exports. Proceedings of
the NEC-63 Conference held February 22-23, 1990 in Washington, D.C. College
Station: Texas A&M University, 1991.
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