Opportunist dealing in the UK pig meat supply chain: Trader mentalities and alternatives

•Meat supply chains have become a matter of public concern.•The power of supermarkets over food supply chains threatens their financial viability and sustainability.•This paper opens up new ways of thinking about how to create a sustainable national supply chain in pig meat production in the mass ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Accounting forum 2013-12, Vol.37 (4), p.300-314
Hauptverfasser: Bowman, Andrew, Froud, Julie, Johal, Sukhdev, Leaver, Adam, Williams, Karel
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container_end_page 314
container_issue 4
container_start_page 300
container_title Accounting forum
container_volume 37
creator Bowman, Andrew
Froud, Julie
Johal, Sukhdev
Leaver, Adam
Williams, Karel
description •Meat supply chains have become a matter of public concern.•The power of supermarkets over food supply chains threatens their financial viability and sustainability.•This paper opens up new ways of thinking about how to create a sustainable national supply chain in pig meat production in the mass market where low price is crucial. The scandal surrounding the presence of horsemeat in UK supermarket meat products has focused public attention on the problems of complex, fragmented food supply chains. Through a study of the UK's pig meat supply chain, this paper proposes a new framing of the problem in terms of opportunistic dealing adopted by the supermarkets in vertically disintegrated supply chains, where all actors attempt to pass the risks and costs onto somebody else. This outcome is the result of cultural practices and competences in buyer-led supermarket organizations where strong supermarket chains have the power to capture processor and producer margins. One consequence is that mass-market meat production and processing is close to unviable, as evidenced here by the analysis of the VION Food Group. However, there are mainstream alternatives to the retail-led dysfunctional supply chain. This paper presents an alternative integrated supply chain model using the case of Morrisons, the UK's fourth largest supermarket chain. If fragmented supply chains are not inevitable, the important issue explored in the conclusion is how the inadequacies of government policy, which understands the problem of the sector but is stuck with a competition-based mindset, obstruct the creation of a more sustainable supply chain.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.accfor.2013.07.001
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subjects Business models
Geography
Macroeconomics
Meat supply chains
Pig meat supply
Social accounting
Social responsibility
Studies
Supermarket power
Vertical integration
title Opportunist dealing in the UK pig meat supply chain: Trader mentalities and alternatives
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