|  29/08/06
          
           Increasing industry acceptance there will be a world deficit in
            beef in five years time gives the UK industry a not to be missed
            opportunity to wean itself off outdated, low value, sales strategies
            triggered by chronic international surpluses – and prepare
            for a period when increasingly short supplies will generate extreme
            competition and much higher retail and ex-farm prices.
           
                
NBA chairman, Duff Burrell
              
                
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             So says the National Beef Association which is pleased
              with the level of agreement that further lifts in the world economy
              will bring so many new consumers to the beef eating table that
              not even massive uplifts in South American production will be able
              to keep pace with the huge lift in demand.
              “The only qualification is that the relentless lift in
              world living standards must not be interrupted by general political,
              economic, or military instability,” explained NBA chairman,
              Duff Burrell. 
             “Otherwise there is more accord than we expected to the
              proposition that the millions of new Asians, Chinese, and Russians
              who are expected to join the international beef eating club will
              present a bigger demand challenge than world production resources
              can possibly cope with.” 
             “And that huge breeding and other production advances in
              Brazil will do little more than help it keep pace with the lift
              in its own internal demand and leave very little overspill to direct
              at an increasingly hungry world market which will include an even
              bigger European Union with its own production gaps to fill.” 
             But the NBA believes that the low price-low margin attitudes
              that currently dominate the UK 's retail and processing sectors
              put the domestic industry in a poor position to take advantage
              of this encouraging onward development. 
             “Discussions with influential beef traders have still to
              reveal anyone who disagrees with the proposition that international
              demand could outstrip supply as early as 2010-2012,” said
              Mr Burrell. 
             “However the largest and most powerful UK processing and
              retail companies have yet to establish a pro-active position and
              safeguard their own futures by encouraging the highest possible
              level of domestic production because current supply strategies,
              which are based on easily obtained top-ups using imported beef,
              will very soon be overtaken.” 
             “The NBA's advice is that there are even more compelling
              arguments than there were before for current strategies, in which
              extremely meager supply chain margins make it impossible for farmers,
              slaughterers and retailers to enjoy profit at the same time, to
              be abandoned before the entire system chokes through financial
              asphyxiation.” 
             “And for new strategies to be established in which more
              margin is generated for the chain as a whole through much higher
              retail prices – which will not be as risky as many still
              believe them to be because the same world population pressure that
              will lift the international beef market will raise the value of
              competing products too.” 
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