MANHATTAN , Kan. – U.S. consumers are increasingly interested in how their food is grown, and a recent study shows that media coverage of animal welfare issues does have an impact on demand for meat.
The study, that involved a search of U.S. newspapers and magazines from 1982 to 2008, suggested that media attention to animal welfare issues has not directly impacted beef demand. It did, however, reduce pork and poultry demand. A fact sheet and other information is available online at www.agmanager.info and search for publication MF-2951.
“While beef demand was found to not be directly influenced by increased media attention to animal welfare issues, this should not be interpreted as the beef industry being immune,” said Glynn Tonsor, a Kansas State University Research and Extension agricultural economist. He, along with Nicole J. Olynk, assistant professor of agricultural economics at Purdue, conducted the study.
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