A market target for the New Zealand dairy industry
Authors
Date
1965
Type
Report
Collections
Abstract
In the marketing section of its research programme
the Agricultural Economics Research unit is concerned,
amongst other things, with formulating projections of the
future demand for New Zealand's agricultural exports.
Such projections are an essential ingredient in the
formulation of long term development plans for the New
Zealand economy, especially in so far as those plans are
concerned with the desirability of emphasis on increasing
exports compared with the expansion of import substitution.
Market projections are also needed to assist policy
makers in making the correct decisions as to the relative
accent which should be placed on different products within
the broad agricultural group. In this latter context,
market projections or targets for specific products, are
particularly important as a necessary adjunct to the
overall agricultural production target of 4 per cent per
annum, set by the Agricultural Development Conference.
In this paper, the author directs his attention
first to the general methodological questions underlying
market projections; and then he turns his attention
more specifically to the likely future supply of and
demand for dairy products. The question he sets out
to answer is "Can New Zealand in the next ten years
sell, at profitable prices, an increased quantity of dairy
products at a rate which would justify encouraging the
industry to expand its output at 4 per cent per annum?".