美国新鲜水果和蔬菜营销:新兴贸易实践、趋势和问题

L. Calvin, R. Cook, M. Denbaly, C. Dimitri, L. Glaser, C. Handy, M. Jekanowski, P. Kaufman, B. Krissoff, G. Thompson, S. Thornsbury
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引用次数: 92

摘要

在过去的一年里,新鲜农产品托运人和食品零售商之间的贸易惯例引起了全国的关注。托运人担心,最近的零售整合导致了市场力量和费用和服务的增加。零售商辩称,这些新的贸易惯例反映了他们的经营成本和消费者的需求。贸易行为包括批量折扣和入场费等费用,以及自动补货、特殊包装和要求第三方食品安全认证等服务。贸易实践也指交易的整体结构——例如,长期关系或合同与没有持续承诺的日常销售。本研究比较了1999年和1994年流行的贸易惯例,将它们置于不断发展的托运人/零售商关系的更广泛背景下。大多数托运人和零售商报告说,与交易相关的费用和服务的发生率和规模在过去5年中有所增加。对于我们调查的大多数商品,支付给零售商的费用通常约为销售额的1- 2%,但袋装沙拉的费用为1- 8%。关于这些新做法的发生率和规模的资料很少。为了增加公开可用的信息,我们采访了有限数量的托运人、零售商和批发商,了解他们的公司和贸易惯例。我们从受访公司那里得到了高度的自愿合作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
U.S. Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Marketing: Emerging Trade Practices, Trends, and Issues
In the past year, trade practices between fresh produce shippers and food retailers gained national attention. Shippers are concerned that recent retail consolidation has led to market power and the growing incidence of fees and services. Retailers argue that these new trade practices reflect their costs of doing business and the demands of consumers. Trade practices include fees such as volume discounts and slotting fees, as well as services like automatic inventory replenishment, special packaging, and requirements for third-party food safety certification. Trade practices also refer to the overall structure of a transaction-for example, long-term relationships or contracts versus daily sales with no continuing commitment. This study compares trade practices in 1999 with those prevalent in 1994, placing them in the broader context of the evolving shipper/retailer relationship. Most shippers and retailers reported that the incidence and magnitude of fees and services associated with transactions has increased over the last 5 years. Fees paid to retailers are usually around 1-2 percent of sales for most of the commodities we examined, but 1-8 percent for bagged salads. Information on the incidence and magnitude of these new practices is scarce. To augment information that is publicly available, we interviewed a limited number of shippers, retailers, and wholesalers about their firms and trade practices. We received a high level of voluntary cooperation from the interviewed firms.
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