Monday, August 4, 2025

Members in the News: August 4, 2025

 David Ortega, Michigan State University

·       Why Ground Beef Prices Are Hitting Record-Highs in the U.S
By: TIME – July 24, 2025

·       What Does 'MKT' Mean on a Menu? These Customers Learn the Hard Way in Viral TikTok
By: USA Today – July 16, 2025

·       Climate Change Has Sent Coffee Prices Soaring. Trump’s Tariffs Will Send Them Higher
By: Grist – July 19, 2025


Yangxuan Liu, University of Georgia

Tift grower wins top prize at Ga. Quality Cotton Awards

By: Valdosta Daily Times – July 24, 2025

“Dr. Yangxuan Liu, extension economist at the University of Georgia, conducted the analysis. Dr. Camp Hand presented the awards at the event in Statesboro on behalf of the UGA Cotton Team.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Valdosta Daily Times


Wendong Zhang, Cornell University

  • What Consumers Can Expect From Import Taxes as the U.S. Sets New tariff rates
    By: PBS – August 1, 2025
  • Trump’s Tariff Tension May Be Easing After Deals With EU, Japan
    By: CS Monitor – July 23, 2025

Steven Deller, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Research: Rising Housing Costs Hinder Community Well-Being

By: The Daily Yonder – July 29, 2025

 “As housing costs continue to rise nationwide, particularly in the post Covid-19 period, the number of people experiencing housing financial stress, referring to financial strain due to a large housing expense, is becoming a cause for concern.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: The Daily Yonder


Joshua Maples, Mississippi State University

Flesh-Easting Screwworm and Mississippi's Cattle Producers

By: Super Talk Mississippi – July 25, 2025

(Continued...)
Listen on: Super Talk Mississippi


Amitrajeet Batabyal, Rochester Institute of Technology

The Economy Can’t Handle the Heat—or the Swings

By: Basis Point – July 25, 2025  

"Hot temperatures have significant and far-reaching effects on India, impacting public health, agriculture, the economy, and infrastructure. Heatwaves, now more frequent and intense due to climate change, pose severe health risks, especially for vulnerable populations such as the elderly, children, and outdoor workers, often leading to heatstroke and increased mortality."

(Continued...)
Read more on: Basis Point

Monday, July 28, 2025

Members in the News: July 28, 2025

 David Ortega, Michigan State University

  • Your Morning Cup of Coffee May Get Pricier Soon. Here's Why
    By: USA Today – July 16, 2025
  • Why Tomatoes Are Becoming a Lot More Expensive
    By: TIME – July 15, 2025
  • Tomato Prices Projected to Increase as Administration Ends Trade Agreement With Mexico
    By: USA Today – July 15, 2025

Ani Katchova, The Ohio State University

Why Ohio Has Lost Hundreds of Thousands of Acres of Farmland

By: Cincinnati Edition – July 14, 2025

“We’re losing farmland all over the country. Hundreds of thousands of acres have disappeared in Ohio over the past 20 years, according to a study from the Ohio State University. On Cincinnati Edition, where it’s all going, and how a legacy farmer is keeping his land in the family.”

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Read more on: Cincinnati Edition


Daniel Sumner, University of California, Davis

Trump Is Suing to Overturn Prop 12 and Other Animal Welfare Laws

By: Good Men Project – July 20, 2025

“The law has resulted in higher egg prices in California, but not elsewhere. These California rules cause Californians to pay more, but have no measurable impact on eggs (or pork) in other places. Consumers and producers who buy or sell conventional eggs are largely unaffected.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Good Men Project


Bulat Gafarov, University of California, Davis
Jens Hilscher,
University of California, Davis

California Gas Prices Set to Soar in 2026

By: Morning Ag Clips – July 22, 2025

“These price differences between California and the rest of the United States have been gradually increasing: In 2000, the California gas price was approximately $0.25 higher than the national average, but by 2025 the difference increased to $1.50.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Morning Ag Clips


Daniel Sumner, University of California, Davis

Trump Is Suing To Overturn Animal Welfare Laws

By: Truth Dig – July 15, 2025

“The law has resulted in higher egg prices in California, but not elsewhere. These California rules cause Californians to pay more, but have no measurable impact on eggs (or pork) in other places. Consumers and producers who buy or sell conventional eggs are largely unaffected.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Truth Dig


David Ortega, Michigan State University
Marc Bellemare,
University of Minnesota

The Surprising Reason Your Groceries Are More Expensive

By: Time - July 22, 2024

“it is important to note that climate change does not just impact weather via heat and drought, though. It's not just drought, it's floods, it's hurricanes. It can be even colder temperatures that disrupt crops or freeze and frost that are earlier or later than the normal that affect agricultural production.”

“Price increases are being felt right away, because food is perishable. You can store some—a lot of the fruits and vegetables in Mexico tend to be frozen—but a lot of stuff is shipped fresh, and the stuff that is shipped fresh is going to be reflected in the price right away. Food markets are reasonably integrated.”

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Read more on: Time


Amit Batabyal, Rochester Institute of Technology

Drug Pricing: What Can the U.S. Learn From Other Nations?

By: Rochester Business Journal - July 25, 2025 

“There is bipartisan consensus that drugs in the U.S. cost a lot more than in other high-income countries; therefore, it is important to comprehend how governmental interventions in other nations can inform U.S. policy. Recent research on this topic has shed valuable light on the unique market conditions of drugs, including information asymmetries, insurance-mediated demand, and the role of patents in incentivizing innovation.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Rochester Business Journal


Qingxiao Li, Louisiana State University

Newly Launched Kids’ Cereals Prioritize Taste Over Health, Fueling Obesity Concerns

By: Medscape – July 23, 2025

“One of the biggest takeaways from our study is that newly launched cereals marketed to children in the US have trended in the wrong direction nutritionally. Despite growing attention to child nutrition, the lack of nutritional improvement in this prominent food category suggests that broader dietary challenges persist.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Medscape


Jada Thompson, University of Arkansas

What won’t Trump blame on California?

By: VOX – July 24, 2025

“What you saw was this huge amount of birds out of the system, and then we just have a shortage of eggs… 90 percent of the rise in national egg prices can be attributed to bird flu.

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Read more on: VOX


Chad Hart, Iowa State University

Trump’s USDA to Scatter Half its Washington Staff to Field Offices. Critics See a Ploy to Cut Jobs

By: Julesburg Advocate – July 24, 2025

Although it’s important to be closer to farmers and ranchers. Taking those employees out of Washington risks losing an important connection to Congress. You want that balance” to ensure effective farm policy.”

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Read more on: Julesburg Advocate


Jaime Luke, Michigan State University

Beef Prices Reach Record Highs Amid Supply Constraints and High Consumer Demand

By: WWMT - July 25, 2025 

“The current state of the market can actually be traced back to a few years ago. Right after the COVID-19 pandemic, there were notable drought conditions in the western and central parts of the country, which is where a lot of our beef cattle are located.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: By: WWMT 

Wednesday, July 23, 2025

2025 Call for Research Reports, Updates, and Outreach Writing

The Food Distribution Research Society invites submissions of Research Reports, Research Updates, and Outreach Writing for the 2025 Annual Conference to be held in San Diego from October 12-14, 2025. Work related to any food distribution area from the farm gate through retail to the consumer is welcome at FDRS.

Organized Symposium offers the opportunity for presentations and discussion on a single theme or problem related to the food distribution field. Interdisciplinary proposals are welcomed and encouraged. Organized symposia proposals are allowed 1 hour and 30 minutes and they are expected to allocate at least 30 minutes to discussion. 

Research Reports are scholarly papers focusing on the results of research efforts. Reports will be evaluated and accepted based on one-page abstracts that describe the research and its relevance to food distribution issues. Presentations of research reports are limited to 15 minutes each, with 5 minutes for Q&A. 

Research Updates are synopses of research or educational work either (1) recently completed, (2) in progress, or (3) to be undertaken within the next year. To give an update, submit a maximum one-page description of the update. Presentations of updates are limited to 10 minutes each, with 3 minutes for Q&A. 

Outreach Writing comprises technical communication of food industry issues that are key to Extension/Industry Outreach. These may include ‘industry outlook’, food supply chain, and marketing articles or content similar to AAEA’s Choices Magazine, for example, geared toward non-academic audiences. Entries in this category must include a PDF copy of the actual article or printout from an online source and the submission form. Authors will have 15 minutes to present a summary of the article’s key points and how it was used in outreach/extension efforts, with 5 minutes for Q&A. 

Teaching Case Studies are scholarly papers that feature a firm or industry addressing an issue relevant to classroom discussion. Case studies can be developed using either primary or secondary research data. Submissions will be evaluated based on a one-page, single-spaced, extended abstract describing the firm/industry, the main issue(s) of the case or decision to be made, why the case is important for teaching purposes, and the learning objectives. Presentations of teaching case studies are limited to 15 minutes each, with 5 minutes for Q&A. 

ALL SUBMISSIONS MUST USE THIS SUBMISSION FORM
Email submissions, questions, and/or general inquiries about this call to Dr. Maria Bampasidou, Research VP, at
FDRSVPResearch@gmail.com by July 20, 2025.  Authors will be notified of acceptance by early August. All presenters must be registered for the conference. 

Venue:   Paradise Point Resort & Spa

Venue Phone: (858) 240-4913

Venue Website: https://paradisepoint.com

Address:

1404 Vacation Rd, San Diego, California, 92109, United States

Members in the News: July 21, 2025

 David Ortega, Michigan State University

  • How Have Prices Changed Under Trump? Experts Explain
    By: ABC News July 8, 2025
  • Americans Are Eating Cheaper. What That Means for the Economy
    By: Barron’s – July 9, 2025
  • Orange Juice Prices Have Spiked. A 50% Brazil Tariff Will Lift Them Even Higher
    By: Barron’s – July 10, 2025

Roderick Rejesus, North Carolina State University
Zachary Brown,
North Carolina State University

Scientists Make Game-Changing Discovery That Could Revolutionize How We Grow Food: 'A Long-Term Investment'

By: The Cool Down – July 18, 2025

"There is a lot of academic literature looking at short-term effects of cover crops, but our contribution here is in thinking about cover crops as a long-term investment."

"The more you use cover crops, the fewer fertilizer inputs are needed. That effect also increased over time. So, the longer you used cover crops, the more they were able to offset nitrogen fertilizer."

(Continued...)
Read more on: The Cool Down


Carl Zulauf, The Ohio State University
Nick Paulson,
University of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign

Reconciliation Bill Includes Enhanced Safety Net

By: Agri-Pub News – July 12, 2025

“Our estimates use market-year prices of $4.10 for corn and $10.20 for soybeans. The 2025 yields were set at ARC-CO benchmark levels.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Agri-Pub News


Wendiam Sawadgo, Auburn University
Ryan Loy,
University of Arkansas

Midwest Farm Economies Suffered While Some Sun Belt States Kept Rolling in Early 2025

By: Yahoo! News – July 15, 2025

“That’s because Southeastern agriculture includes more poultry and eggs, currently more profitable than the row crops that dominate in the Midwest. The divergence is expected to last, he said, with row-crop prices continuing to fall and meat and egg prices continuing to rise this year.

“Farm bankruptcies nationally came to 259 in the first three months of this year. That was more than any full year since 2021, when there were 276. Arkansas saw 15 farm bankruptcies in the first quarter, almost as many as in all of 2024, when there were 16.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Yahoo! News


Daniel Sumner, University of California, Davis

Trump Is Suing To Overturn Animal Welfare Laws

By: Truth Dig – July 15, 2025

“The law has resulted in higher egg prices in California, but not elsewhere. These California rules cause Californians to pay more, but have no measurable impact on eggs (or pork) in other places. Consumers and producers who buy or sell conventional eggs are largely unaffected.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Truth Dig


Malek Hammami, University of Florida

Tariffs on Brazilian Imports Could Destroy Florida's Citrus Industry, Expert Warns

By: Palm Beach Post – July 16, 2025

“The tariffs on Brazil may juice demand for Florida’s home-grown fruit at first — driving up prices that growers can get. But these same tariffs may ultimately make juicing oranges an unprofitable industry… Right now, mixing Brazilian and Mexican orange concentrate with the juice of Sunshine State oranges is keeping the industry alive because hurricanes and a citrus greening disease have decimated the state’s groves, which are predominantly used to grow oranges for juice.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Palm Beach Post


Brandon McFadden, University of Arkansas

Trump’s Cane Sugar Coca-Cola Push Could Disrupt U.S. Agriculture: Trade Group

By: MSNBC TV – July 17, 2025

“Changes in demand for corn syrup, such as that used in Coke, would increase demand for cane sugar in Louisiana and Florida, as well as from Central and South America, where the sweetener is heavily tariffed. It could force corn farmers—primarily in Iowa and Illinois—to look for business elsewhere… The exports were looking really good, but they would look even better if we were still supplying China so heavily.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: MSNBC TV


Brenna Ellison, Purdue University

We're Tracking Grocery Prices Around Chicago Since Trump Took Office. They're Up And likely to Keep Rising

By: Chicago Sun Times – July 18, 2025

“I do think people are bracing for impact,” Brenna Ellison, an agricultural economics professor at Purdue, says.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Chicago Sun Times


Brian Roe, The Ohio State University

The Short-Term Vacation Rental Industry Has a $2.3bn Food Waste Problem

By: Ag Fund News – July 18, 2025

“This uneaten food equates to a 5% additional lodging tax “through the money they spend on food that they never eat while they’re in the Airbnb.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Ag Fund News

Monday, July 14, 2025

Members in the News: July 14, 2025

 

Wendong Zhang, Cornell University

  • Trump’s Previous Tariff Push Terrified the World Economy. He’s Betting This Time is Different
    By: AP News – July 8, 2025
  • Trump Says it Was ‘Too Time-Consuming’ to Negotiate Trade Deals So it Was Just Easier to Send Letters
    By: Fortune – July 9, 2025 

Zach Rutledge, Michigan State University

"MSU Study Shows Farm Labor Changes, Challenges"

By: Vegetable Growers News – July 12, 2025

“In a Michigan State University (MSU) study, researchers provide an overview of the farm labor market in Michigan, emphasizing changes in employment, wages and farmworker characteristics to highlight how the farm labor force has changed over the past 20 years.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Vegetable Growers News


Amitrajeet Batabyal, Rochester Institute of Technology

Knowing English Greatly Helps One’s Employability in India

By: Basis Point – July 10, 2025

“Low-income individuals in India and other developing countries often lack the skills required for employment in growing service sectors such as tourism, call centers, and business process outsourcing. While job training programmers often emphasize vocational or technical skills, English language skills—critical for many modern jobs—are frequently overlooked.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Basis Point


Peter Orazem, Iowa State University
Chad Hart,
Iowa State University

Iowa's Sinking GDP Linked to Long-Term Trends, Economists Warn

By: Axios Des Moines – July 7, 2025

“Iowa's economy has not done well compared to other states for years, starting with slower growth in 2018.”

“The state's ag sector took a step back last year, and the latest GPD report is the result.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Axios Des Moines


Brian Roe, The Ohio State University

US Vacation Renters Are Wasting $2B Worth of Food Every Year: Study

By: WDCTV – July 10, 2025

“So people are basically paying an additional lodging tax through the money they spend on food that they never eat while they’re in the Airbnb.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: WDCTV