14 research outputs found

    What Does Your Food Dollar Buy? A Self-contained Discussion Guide

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    Market Information -- Where to Get It, How to Use It

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    Current market information, coupled with outlook information and an understanding of seasonal price and supply patterns, can help make your marketing decisions an additional paying part of your farm business

    Foreign Trade in Livestock Products: Principles, Issues, Patterns, Trends

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    Federally-Supported Research in Agriculture at Land Grant Colleges and Universities and State Experiment Stations

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    Iowa’s grain-elevator industry: Factors affecting its organization and structural adjustment

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    In December 1970, there were 1,178 grain elevators in Iowa. The total storage capacity of these elevators was in excess of 432 million bushels. In recent years, both the number and the storage capacity of elevators have been increasing. More than half the elevators had a storage capacity of 300,000 bushels or less. This group, however, accounted for only 21 percent of the total storage capacity. The current organization of the industry is typified by an elevator that receives com and soybeans from a supply area with a radius of 5 to 7 miles. A statistical cost function, derived from data from over 150 cooperative elevators, indicated that significant economies of scale exist in elevator operations. This cost function showed that an elevator with a capacity of 300,000 bushels would have an average cost of 11 cents per bushel of grain handled, compared with a cost of 7.9 cents for an elevator with a capacity of 2 million bushels. Since the statistical cost function was based on accounting data reflecting historical investment costs and interest rates, these estimates of elevator costs should be regarded as conservative

    The future for sheep

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    In the 1960\u27s the sheep industry has been described as being at a crossroads. Serious concern has been expressed over the future of the entire industry. Declining numbers, competition from other meats and fabrics and low returns have all been cited as reasons for pessimism. But recent developments in product improvement and industrywide efforts to a~tack problems have given rise to a degree of cautious optimism about the future.https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/card_reports/1022/thumbnail.jp
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