17 research outputs found

    When Point Estimates Miss the Point: Stochastic Modeling of WTO Restrictions

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    Paper presented at a meeting of the International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium held in San Diego, CA, December 4-6, 2005.Point estimates of agricultural and trade policy impacts often paint an incomplete or even misleading picture. For many purposes it is important to estimate a distribution of outcomes. Stochastic modeling can be especially important when policies have asymmetric effects or when there is interest in the tails of distributions. Both of these factors are important in evaluating World Trade Organization (WTO) commitments on internal support measures. Point estimates based on a continuation of 2005 U.S. agricultural policies and average values for external factors indicate that U.S. support would remain well below agreed commitments under the Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture (URAA). Stochastic estimates indicate that the mean value of the U.S. Aggregate Measure of Support (AMS) is substantially greater than the deterministic point estimate. In 41.8 percent of 500 stochastic outcomes, the URAA AMS limit is exceeded at least once between 2006 and 2014

    Current State of the Dairy Industry

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    Testimony given before the House Agriculture Subcommittee on Department Operations, Oversight, Nutrition and Forestry Tuesday, May 20, 2003 at the request of committee chair, Representative Gutknecht

    Effect on the United States Dairy Industry of Removing Current Federal Regulations

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    This analysis provides a forward-looking examination (2003-2012) of what the dairy industry may look like if each of several federal dairy regulations is removed

    The Effect of Adopting California Fluid Milk Standards in the United States

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    The Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute at the University of Missouri (FAPRI-MU) has analyzed the impact of adopting the current California fluid milk standards throughout the U.S. There have been numerous studies of the effects of imposing California fluid milk standards across the U.S. (Salathe and Price, Outlaw et. al., Boynton). In general, these studies tended to reach similar conclusions. The increased use of solids nonfat reduced Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) inventories of nonfat dry milk and raised prices for nonfat solids, which tended to increase farmer milk prices. Although similar results are found in this analysis, the market situation is very different today than when those studies were conducted.Material in this publication is based upon work supported by the Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service; US Department of Agriculture, under Agreement No. 2009-03404

    Current State Of The U.S. Agricultural Economy

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    Testimony Provided to the Joint Hearing of the Subcommittee on Empowerment and the Subcommittee on Rural Enterprises, Business Opportunities and Special Small Business Problems of the Committee on Small Business on November 3, 1999

    Consensus Analysis of the Final Rule for Reform of the Federal Milk Marketing Order System

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    Testimony provided to the Joint Hearing of the Subcommittee on Empowerment and the Subcommittee on Rural Enterprises, Business Opportunities and Special Small Business Problems of the Committee on Small Business

    Calculating Agricultural Use Values for Missouri Farmland

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    Please note that there are three parts to the report. The report may also be found on the FAPRI publication website (http://www.fapri.missouri.edu/outreach/publications/umc.asp?current_page=outreach) as FAPRI-UMC Report #16-07.This report provides the background necessary to show that agricultural use values should reflect the expected future stream of returns generated by the land and discounted to current dollars.Material in this publication is based upon work supported by the State Tax Commission of Missouri (Grant Project #00013776)

    An analysis of economic relationships in the U.S. beef industry with emphasis on policy evaluation

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    June 1992."6/92/500"--Cover.Includes bibliographical references (pages 60-64).Includes bibliographical references (pages 60-64)

    Split-time AI : using estrus detection aids to optimize timed artificial insemination (2016)

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    New July 2016.Includes bibliographical reference

    Split-time Al : using estrus detection aids to optimize timed artificial insemination (2018)

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    Timed AI pregnancy rates can be optimized through use of a split-time AI approach following administration of the 14-day CIDR-PG protocol for heifers and the 7-day COSynch + CIDR protocol for mature cows. Using split-time AI, insemination of non-estrous females is delayed until 20 to 24 hours after the scheduled time for fixed-time AI. Estrotect estrus detection aids applied at the time of PG administration allow producers to determine the estrous status of females and inseminate at the optimal time.Includes bibliographical reference
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