PIG PRODUCTION
BACON OR PORK
OUTLOOK FOR SEASON
In an interview with a representative of the Press when asked about the market prospects for pigs this season JNLr W. A. Phillips, Chairman of Directors of the New Zealand Co-operative Pig Marketing Association stated inter alia, that up to the present there is still no prospect of an export market for bacon pigs. Britain lias, however, agreed to take our porker pig's in a carcase weight range of 60 to 120'lbs. As yet there is no indication of quantity or price, but it is confidently anticipated that our own Government will continue the commandeer at F. 0.8. for all porkers killed in excess of local requirements. Should this transpire and the price fixed approximate that of last year, this would afford a stabilising factor for the local bacon market. Failing this and in spite of any practical application of theoretical forms of planned production, supply and demand must inevitably create wider points of market fluctuation. When the Government lifted the exportable weight of pork to 1201bs producers' marketing difficulties were in any case greatly relieved.
The local market prefers lightweight baconers of from 121 to 140 lbs so with an exportable topweight for pork of 1201bs great flexibility is afforded in catering for one or other of these markets at short notice. Buttermilk fattencrs who in past years were mainly catered for by exporters and whose production would approximate upwaids of 50,000 baconers annually will now be forced on to the local market for an outlet for their product. While this must have a bearing on local market conditions, this quantity is less than one quarter of local market requirements. "Although under existing conditions," concluded Mr Phillips, "one would be presumptive and even foolish to attempt a market forecast as a lead to producers in the preferential production of pork cr .bacon pigs, on the assumption that the commandeer price is continued for pork, in a spirit of mutual helpfulness 1 am willing to give it as my opinion that at all killing points which are adjacent to curing factories catering for city trade, baconeis to December 31s*. are likely to be in good demand, while in the case of other normal killing points from which the transport and other handling charges on carcases as opposed to the delivery of live pigs to curing factories would be competitively uneconomic, producers would be well advised not to take their pigs above porker weights."
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BPB19410811.2.25
Bibliographic details
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Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 4, Issue 140, 11 August 1941, Page 5
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411PIG PRODUCTION Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 4, Issue 140, 11 August 1941, Page 5
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