东亚肉类进口需求分析:艾伯塔省和加拿大的市场前景

M. Veeman, T. Veeman, Shiferaw Adilu
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引用次数: 3

摘要

本研究侧重于对肉类出口商具有潜在重要性的四个选定的亚洲市场的肉类需求和市场脆弱性。为此目的确定的市场是日本、韩国、印度尼西亚和新加坡。根据以往的研究,报告了市场前景和脆弱性的初步概述。还对进口需求和从加拿大/阿尔伯塔出口到这些市场的各种肉类之间的替代情况进行了详细评估。这需要收集和分析有关四个亚洲国家主要肉类消费和进口的大量数据。采用了两种不同的计量经济模型。其中包括来源差异化的几乎理想进口需求系统和多重竞争互动模型。报告以各种肉类(牛肉、猪肉、家禽和其他)之间以及各种肉类的不同来源之间的交叉弹性的形式详细估计了替代趋势。肉类来源包括加拿大、美国、欧盟、大洋洲、亚洲发展中国家和其他国家。亚洲发展中国家的出口反映出泰国、台湾和中国大陆都是亚洲其他国家的主要肉类出口国;拉丁美洲也是向本区域一些国家出口牛肉的重要地区。在四个进口国中,几乎在所有情况下,市场份额弹性相对于本国价格都是负的和显著的。此外,除了韩国的肉类进口市场,在大多数情况下,自身的价格弹性是有弹性的。可以得出的结论是,东亚的肉类市场对价格非常敏感,价格是这些国家肉类市场份额的最重要决定因素。交叉价格弹性可分为两类:不同来源的相同产品之间的交叉价格弹性(例如,日本牛肉进口市场上美国牛肉和大洋洲牛肉之间)和商品之间的交叉价格弹性(例如,日本肉类进口市场上来自任何来源的美国牛肉和家禽之间)。关于交叉产品价格弹性的研究结果并不像产品本身的价格弹性那样具有结论性。交叉弹性仅在61%的情况下为正。在印度尼西亚、日本和新加坡,猪肉进口市场的替代关系比其他任何肉类市场都更为普遍,而在韩国,牛肉进口市场的替代关系比其他任何肉类市场都更为普遍。这意味着这些国家的猪肉和牛肉市场竞争更加激烈。进口的高支出弹性和从某一出口国进口的无弹性的自身价格弹性相结合,意味着该出口来源在某一进口市场上具有强大的出口潜力。美国似乎在印尼、日本和韩国享有这样的地位,因为它是大多数肉类的主要出口国。加拿大对日本和韩国的猪肉出口面临着自身价格和支出弹性的弹性,而对韩国牛肉市场则面临着自身价格和支出弹性的不弹性。虽然东亚肉类进口市场由澳大利亚、新西兰和一些亚洲国家等地理位置接近的出口国主导,但这些来源的市场份额不时出现大幅波动,特别是在印度尼西亚和韩国。因此,对于像加拿大这样距离较远的出口商来说,利用这些机会是真正的机会。这将需要进行战略规划,建立信息能力,通过了解这些市场的偏好、组织和贸易惯例,为这些市场提供服务。它还需要通过积极的、适当指导的、有效的促进和发展活动来适当定位。对市场信息的投资对于提高能力和定位活动都是必要的。即便如此,价格和质量是实现对这些市场出口潜力的重要特征。在这种情况下,对食品安全规定的投资和相关“安全食品”形象的发展可能是声誉的一个重要特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
ANALYSIS OF EAST ASIAN MEAT IMPORT DEMAND: MARKET PROSPECTS FOR ALBERTA AND CANADA
This study focuses on the demand for meat and the market vulnerabilities that apply to four selected Asian markets that are of potential importance to meat exporters. The markets identified for this purpose are Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, and Singapore. An initial overview of market prospects and vulnerabilities based on previous studies is reported. Detailed assessments of import demand and substitution between various meats for meat exports from Canada/Alberta to each of these markets was also undertaken. This required collection and analysis of extensive data relating to consumption and imports of major meat groups in the four Asian countries. Two different econometric models were applied. These included source-differentiated Almost Ideal Import Demand Systems and Multiple Competitive Interaction models. Detailed estimates are reported of the substitution tendencies, in the form of cross-elasticities between various meats (beef, pork, poultry and other) and between different sources of the various meats. Meat sources include Canada, the United States, European Union, Oceania, Developing Asia and others. Developing Asia exports reflect that Thailand, Taiwan and China are all major meat exporters to other countries in Asia; Latin America is also a significant exporter of beef to some countries in this region. Market share elasticities are negative and significant with respect to own prices in almost all cases in each of the four importing countries. Furthermore, the own price elasticities are elastic in the majority of cases except in the meat import market of South Korea. It can be concluded that the meat market in East Asia is very price responsive and that price is the most important determinant of meat market share in these countries. Cross-price elasticities may be grouped into two classes: cross price elasticities between same products from different sources (e.g., between U.S. beef and beef from Oceania in the Japanese beef import market) and cross price elasticities between goods (e.g., between U.S. beef and poultry from any source in the Japanese meat import market). Findings about cross product-price elasticities are not as conclusive as the own price elasticities. The cross-elasticities are positive only in 61 percent of the cases. In Indonesia, Japan, and Singapore, substitution relationships are more prevalent in pork import markets than in any other meat market, while in South Korea, such relationships are more prevalent in the beef import market than in any other meat market. This implies that competition is stiffer in the pork and beef markets of these countries. A combination of high expenditure elasticity for imports and inelastic own price elasticity for imports from a given exporter imply strong export potential for that export source in a given import market. The U.S. appears to enjoy such a position in Indonesia, Japan, and South Korea for most of the meats for which it is a major exporter. Canada faces elastic own price and expenditure elasticities in its pork exports to both Japan and South Korea, but inelastic own price and expenditure elasticities in the beef market of South Korea. Although East Asian meat import markets are dominated by the closely located exporters of Australia, New Zealand and some Asian countries, significant swings are observed in the market shares of these sources from time to time, particularly in Indonesia and South Korea. Thus there are real opportunities for more distant exporters, like Canada, to take advantage of these. This will require strategic planning, to build the information capacity to service these markets through knowledge of their preferences, organizations and trade practices. It will also require appropriate positioning, through aggressive, appropriately directed, effective promotion and development activities. Investment in market information is necessary to improve both capacity and positioning activities. Even so, price and quality are important features for the potential of export to these markets to be achieved. Investment in food safety provisions, and development of an associated "safe food" image is likely to be an important feature of reputation in this context.
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