[Blank Page in Original Bulletin] The Texas Retail Meat Industry — Structure, Operational Characteristics, and Competitive Practices All programs andiinformation of The Texas Agricultural Experiment Station are available to everyone without regard to race, color, religion, sex, age, or national origin. Mention of a trademark or a proprietary product does not constitute a guarantee or warranty of the product by The Texas Agricultural Experiment Station and does not imply its approval to the exclusion of other products that also may be suitable. [Blank Page in Original Bulletin] CONTENTS I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l Structural Characteristics of the U.S. Retail Food Industry... 2 Characteristics of the Texas Retail Meat Industry............. 6 FiVrmSIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlo Volume and Type of Meat Handled............................l1 ' Quality of Meat Handled and Grading Practices Employed.....l7 Centralized Fabrication and Processing.....................18 SupplieSIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIZO Geographic Sources of Meat Purchases.......................20 SupplierIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII21 Form of Meat Purchases and Sales..............................24 PurchavSeSIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII24 SaleSIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII27 Purchasing and Selling Practices..............................29 Meat Purchasing Practices..................................29 Meat Selling Practices.....................................33 Promotional and Advertising Practices.........................34 SumaryIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII38 CitedIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII45 TablesIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII46 ACKNOWLEDGMNTS The author gratefully acknowledges helpful comments and sug- gestions by Donald E. Farris during the preparation of the original manuscript. Helpful suggestions were also provided by Agricultural Economics Department review comittee members Vernon E. Schneider, William J. Vastine, Edward Uvacek, and Zerle L. Carpenter of the Animal Science Department. ii HIGHLIGHTS The retail meat industry has undergone dramatic changes during the last two decades in terms of industry structure, purchasing and merchan- dising techniques, type and quality of products sold, and meat handling and distribution practices. This study focused on these questions and is the first in a series of three studies designed to analyze the mar- ket structure, performance, and competitive practices of the Texas meat industry at the retail, wholesale, and slaughter levels. Data for this study were obtained through personal interviews with owners and managers of retail grocery firms in Texas for 1974. Respond- ents were selected on a stratified random sample basis to represent every segment of the retail grocery industry and to provide data for varying sizes of retail firms. Completed questionnaires represented data from firms which handled approximately 7O percent of the total fresh and processed red meat sold by retailers in Texas during 1974. The Texas retail meat industry is characterized by large, diversi- fied supermarkets which feature mass selling techniques and merchandise meat products on a strict specification basis. In 1974, supermarkets accounted for more than 90 percent of the 1,040 million pounds of fresh and processed red meat merchandised by Texas retail food stores. Grocery firms and affiliated independent groups with ll or more stores accounted for more than four—fifths of the fresh and processed meat items sold by Texas retail stores during 1974. Steer and heifer beef, primarily fed beef, represented almost 40 per- cent of the fresh and processed meat items handled by retailers during 1974. Next in importance were smoked and cured pork, cow and bull beef, iii fresh pork, sausage and variety meats, calf, ground meat, lamb, and veal. However, after cow and bull beef and trimmings from other fresh meats were converted to ground meat, it then ranked second with 26 percent of the total. Texas retailers purchased steer and heifer beef under a strict set of specifications concerning weight, sex, quality and yield grade, trim, and color. Calf and lamb specifications included mostly quality grade and weight. Pork specifications centered primarily on weight ranges for specified cuts and trim. Approximately 80 percent of the steer and heifer beef sold by Texas retailers was reportedly equivalent in quality to U. S. Choice or higher. However, retail firms with ll or more stores and those with 4 or more supermarkets reported that 90 percent of the steer and heifer beef merchandised by their stores was equivalent to U. S. Choice or higher. Calf sold by retailers was mostly U. S. Good, while veal and lamb were predominantly U. S. Choice or higher. Cow and bull beef, which is sold mostly as ground meat or sausage items, was generally U. S. Commercial or lower. Texas retailers purchased almost 80 percent of their meat require- ments from suppliers within Texas. These suppliers were almost exclu— sively packers. Texas suppliers were major sources for all types of meat items except lamb and fresh pork. Fresh pork inshipments origi- nated primarily from Kansas—Nebraska and Iowa, while lamb inshipments originated mostly from Colorado, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and New Zealand. Two—thirds or more of the total beef, calf, veal, and lamb was pur- chased in carcass form. Steer and heifer beef not purchased as carcass iv beef was purchased as quarters, primals or subprimals, while noncarcass cow and bull beef was purchased as boneless beef. Fresh pork was pur- chased predominantly in wholesale or primal cuts. Boxed meat purchases by retailers were confined to steer and heifer beef, cow and bull beef, lamb, and fresh pork. About 44 percent of the fresh pork was purchased as boxed meat, followed by boneless cow and bull beef with 27 percent and steer and heifer beef with almost l6 per- cent. One-third of the total meat handled by Texas retailers during 1974 was processed in a centralized retail fabrication center prior to store door delivery. Retail firms with ll or more stores accounted for 90 percent of the meat processed through retailer-owned central warehouse and fabrication facilities. These firms reported that almost 40 per- cent of their steer and heifer beef, 30 percent of their calf, and more than two—thirds of their cow and bull was processed through centralized retail warehouse and fabrication facilities. Fresh pork was generally not processed through centralized facilities, but one—third of the smoked and cured pork moved through centralized retail fabrication centers for additional slicing and packaging. Over 70 percent of the retailers used a predetermined markup to set prices for fresh and processed meat items during 1974. The composite markup (gross margin) of heavy beef averaged about 22 percent; it averaged 23 percent for both calf and fresh pork and slightly higher for smoked and cured pork and other processed items. Meat promotion and advertising has become a standard competitive practice for attracting customers by retailers. More than 57 percent featured specials on fresh and processed meats on a weekly basis, while another ll percent featured specials twice per week. Most of the re- maining retailers did not feature specials or maintain regular promo- tional programs. Price discounts or markdowns during specials varied by type of meat item. However, markdowns by retailers featuring specials on a weekly or more frequent basis ranged from 10 to 30 percent. Over four- fifths of the retailers interviewed found that specials increased total meat sales from 20 to 40 percent. The effect of meat promotions and specials on total retail sales brought varied responses from retailers interviewed. Forty-five percent found it difficult to estimate the effect of meat specials on total com- pany sales, since such specials were conducted on a weekly or daily basis. However, one-third of the retailers found company sales increas- ing from l to 10 percent as a result of meat specials. Policies of con- tinuous meat specials reflect concern with competitive position in the market and maintenance of sales at desired levels by many retailers. [Blank Page in Original Bulletin] THE TEXAS RETAIL MEAT INDUSTRY -- STRUCTURE, OPERATIONAL CHARACTERISTICS, AND COMPETITIVE PRACTICES Raymond A. Dietrich * The retail meat industry is characterized by rapidly changing technology, highly competitive practices, and continued change in structural and operational characteristics at the firm level. Store numbers throughout the United States, including Texas, continue to decline, while store size and sales volume per store continue to in- crease. In addition, technological advances are evident in the packaging, shipping, and storage of meat items. Centralized ware- housing and meat fabrication centers as well as boxed meat programs are prominent throughout the retail industry. Changes within the Texas livestock and meat industry, similar to those in the United States, are evident in the production, slaughtering, and distribution sectors. With the development of large scale commer- cial feedlot operations in Texas, specialized cattle slaughtering and beef processing firms have established plants within the concentrated cattle feeding area in the Texas Panhandle-Plains region. Many of these specialized plants have installed facilities to fabricate car- casses into primals or subprimals for shipment in bags or film wraps as “boxed beef directly to retail distribution centers or individual stores. bMushrooming industrial development and a rapidly growing population in the Texas Gulf Coast and North Texas areas have been accompanied by *.Associate professor, The Texas Agricultural Experiment Station (Depart- ment of Agricultural Economics). increases in numbers and size of large retail organizations which feature mass selling techniques via one—stop shopping in supermarket facilities. Further technological developments in refrigeration and transportation systems, general usage of federal grading standards, and rigid specifi- cations standards have allowed retail organizations to purchase and dis- tribute consistent quality meat items over a larger geographic area. These developments have precipitated changes at the retail level in marketing and buying practices employed for fresh and processed meat; the type and quality of meat items sold; handling and storage practices and distribution channels employed; and strategies for competing in mar- ket outlets. This study will focus on these questions and is the first in a series of three studies designed to analyze the market structure, performance, and competitive practices of the Texas meat industry at the retail, wholesale, and slaughter levels. This study is designed to com- plement and update a study of the Texas meat industry conducted in 1960 (1). Data for this study were obtained through personal interviews with owners and managers of retail grocery firms in Texas for 1974. Respond- ents were selected on a stratified random sample basis as shown in Table 1. Completed questionnaires represented data from firms which handled approximately 70 percent of the total fresh red meat and processed meat sold by retailers in Texas during 1974. Structural Characteristics of the U. S. Retail Food Industry The changing structure of the food retailing industry, including innovations in buying and selling at the retail level, has had reverbera- TABLE 1. GROCERY STORE POPULATION, SAMPLING RATE, STORES REPRESENTED BY COMPLETED QUESTIONNAIRES, BY SELECTED AREAS AND TYPE AND SIZE OF FIRM, TEXAS, 1974 Type and size Grocery Stores represented of firm and store Sampling by completed location population ratel questionnaires Number Percent Number Percent 2 Firms with ll or more stores?" Dallas—Ft. Worth, Houston and San Antonio 1,427 100.0 1,237 86.7 Other Texas 447 50.0 K 226 50.6 Total 1,874 88.1 1,463 78.1 Convenience firms with ll or more stores: Dallas—Ft. Worth, Houston and San Antonio 1,218 100.0 975 80.0 Other Texas 284 33.3 149 52.5 Total 1,502 87.4 1,124 74.8 Firms with less than ll stores and 4 or more supermarkets: Dallas—Ft. Worth, Houston and San Antonio 54 100.0 36 66.7 Other Texas 106 25.0 23 21.7 Total 160 50.0 59 36.9 Firms with less than ll stores and l to 3 supermarkets: Dallas—Ft. Worth, Houston and San Antonio 95 33.3 15 15.8 Other Texas 336 10.0 32 9.5 Total 431 15.3 47 10.9 T Firms with less than ll stores and no supermarketsté E Dallas—Ft. Worth, Houston and San Antonio 194 16.7 24 12.3 :Other Texas 373 10.0 16 4.3 Total 1 567 12.2 40 7.1 Y 1/ . 5. , , ,i-Sampling rate was based on firms and stratified by area as indicated. There- *1 fore, store numbers represented by the completed questionnaires may exceed the actual sampling rate. 2/ f—-Does not include convenience stores, but all other retail grocery firms which 5 own or service ll or more stores. 3-The population numbers in this category appear to be understated. 7Source: 1973 Directory of Supermarket Grocery and Convenience Store Chains, ' Chain Store Age. ' tions throughout the slaughtering, processing, and distribution indus- tries as well as within the food retailing industry. Major changes in the food retailing industry include the chain store movement, the establishment of supermarkets, the affiliation of independent grocers with wholesale groups, and the more recent development of convenience stores. gMany retail food stores have followed the lead of large re- tail chains by integrating backward into wholesaling and processing. Although this integration function has been employed by some of the retail firms in their meat operations, it has been considerably more extensive in the dry grocery products sector. Recently, interest in central processing by retailers has grown, especially in breaking car- casses into primals and subprimals in centralized facilities rather than at individual stores. Other factors which have had an impact on food marketing patterns include the development of food discount stores and the continued existence of specialty food stores as meat markets. The changing structure of the food retailing industry which was generated by competitive forces within the industry is also a reflec- tion of changing social and economic forces. The retail industry has responded to such forces as a growing population, rapidly rising per capita incomes, increased consumer mobility, increased numbers of women entering the labor force, and improvements in transportation and refrig- eration by changes in the number, size, and location of retail stores. Two trends are predominant in the retail food industry. Total store numbers are declining, while sales volume per store is increasing (Table 2). The decline in store numbers from 1955 to 1973 is evident mostly in the independent sector of the grocery retail industry, Almost 80 percent of the decline in the independent sector was attributed to TABLE 2. GROCERY STORE NUMBERS AND ANNUAL SALES, AND TYPE OF STORE, UNITED STATES, 1955*1973 Type of store I sqmwwwrw-wm-nw-w r1 Item Independent and Grand year Affiliated Unaffiliated Total Chain Total Store numbers: 1955 101,000 223,500 324,500 18,800 343,300 1965 76,000 128,200 204,200 22,850 227,050 1970 69,400 104,700 174,100 34,200 208,300 1973 64,070 94,530 158,600 40,960 199,560 Annual sales: ———————————————————— ——Bi11ion dollars ——————————————————————— -~ 1955 15,500 9,655 25,155 14,260 39,415 1965 31,800 6,100 37,900 27,205 64,925 1970 39,390 6,950 46,340 42,075 88,415 1973 48,790 7,950 56,740 56,390 113,130 Progressive Grocer, Annual Report of the Grocery Industry, April 1974. Source: the demise of unaffiliated independent stores, Although affiliated independent stores declined 60 percent during this period, annual sales of these stores more than tripled from 1955 to 1973, Chain stores, firms with l1 or more stores, at the same time more than doubled in numbers, while annual sales quadrupled. The dominant forces in the retail food sector today are supermar- kets (Table 3). Supermarkets accounted for almost 80 percent of the total grocery sales in 1973, while supermarket store numbers made up 20 percent of the total. In 1974, supermarkets were defined as stores with sales of $1,000,000 or more annually, compared with $500,000 or more annually before 1974. Under the current definition, supermarkets accounted for 72 percent of the total annual grocery sales in 1974 with supermarket store numbers making up 16 percent of the total (Table 4). Two—thirds of the supermarket sales were accounted for by chains, while independents accounted for the remaining one—third. However, when total grocery sales are considered, grocery receipts were split about equally between chains and independents during 1974. The growth and continued expansion of supermarkets have special significance to the meat industry since meat constitutes about one—fourth of consumer expenditures in supermarkets (Table 5). In addition, beef, the single most important item merchandised by supermarkets on a sales volume basis, accounts for one—third of the total meat sales by super- markets. Characteristics of the Texas Retail Meat Industry The Texas retail food industry, similar to the national retail in- dustry, has declined in total store numbers, while sales volume per store TABLE 3. DISTRIBUTION OF GROCERY STORE NUMBERS AND ANNUAL SALES, BY SIZE OF STORE, UNITED STATES, 1965-1973 Size of store Item and 1/ 1/ 1/ year Small—- Superette— Supermarket—- Total ——————————————————— ——Percent-———————————-—————+————— Store numbers: 1965 73.5 12.5 14.0 100.0 1970 65.5 16.1 18.4 100.0 1973 60.7 18.8 20.5 100.0 Annual sales: 1965 16.3 13.0 70.7 100.0 1970 11.7 12.9 75.4 100.0 1973 9.9 11.3 78.8 100.0 1/ —-Small — sales of less than $150,000 annually; Superette — sales from $150,000 t0 $500 000 annually; and Supermarket - sales of $500,000 or more annually. Source: Progressive Grocer, Annual Report of the Grocery Industry, April 1966, 1971 and 1974, respectively. TABLE 4. GROCERY STORE NUMBERS AND SALES, VOLUME, BY SIZE AND T¥PE OF STORE, UNITED STATES, 1974 ‘* Number of stores Total dollar sales Type of store ,3 and sales volume Number Percent Million dollars Pete; Supermarkets 31,430 15.9 93,960 712 Chains 19,690 10.0 58,760 44§ $1,000,000 — $2,000,000 7,240 3.7 12,300 94 $2,000,000 — $4,000,000 8,770 4.4 26,300 20S Over $4,000,000 3,680 1.9 20,160 15f Independents 11,740 5.9 35,200 . 26} $1,000,000 — $2,000,000 6,100 3.1 10,400 8n. $2,000,000 - $4,000,000 4,080 2.0 13,900 10¢ Over $4,000,000 1,560 .8 10,900 80 Superettes ($500,000—$1,000,000) 11,500 5-3 9,675 7d Cneine 2,000 1.0 1,600 10 Independents 9,500 4.8 8,075 6N Small stores (under $500,00) 132,500 66-9 21,330 164 chains 2,500 1.3 880 .; Independents 130 000 65.6 21,000 16¢ Conyenience stores » 22,700 ll-4 5e320 A 40 Total 198,130 100.0 5130,835 100- A Source: Progressive Grocer, Annual Report of the Grocery Industry, April 1975. TABLE 5. DISTRIBUTION OF CONSUMER EXPENDITURES IN SUPERMARKETS, UNITED STATES, l960—l974 Year Departments 1960 1970 1974 —————— —-Percent———————-— Grocery 47.3 40.5 38. Meat 21.9 28.3 23. Frozen Foods 3.5 3.4 6. Produce 10.0 7.6 7. Bakery 6.2 5.0 4. Dairy 11.1 10.3 9. Ice Cream 1/ 1.1 HABA/General Merchandise—/ 1/ 3.8 4. Snack bar/deli. 1/ —— 4. Total 100.0 100.0 100. 1/ —-Included in grocery department. 2/ —-HABA refers to health and beauty aids. Source: Progressive Grocer, Annual Report of the Grocery Industry, April 1961, 1971 and 1975, respectively. 10 has increased. Substantial change has occurred in the Texas retail meat industry since 1960 with respect to type and quality of meat handled, volume per store, promotional and advertising practices, and.Qther operational practices at the firm and store level. Type of Firms Current data are not available concerning the types of firms com- prising the Texas retail food industry. Data developed in the study re- vealed that corporate chains, which are defined to exclude convenience chains while including all other types of corporate organizations in- cluding affiliated independents, comprised about 20 percent of the Texas retail food firms and more than 40 percent of the retail stores in 1974. These corporate chains accounted for more than 85 percent of the 1,040 million pounds of fresh and processed red meat sold by Texas retailers during l974. The retail grocery industry in Texas, as in the rest of the nation, is dominated by supermarkets. Supermarkets, retail firms with $500,000 or more in sales annually, comprised about 90 percent of the grocery stores by multiunit firms (excluding convenience chains) with one or more supermarkets in Texas during 1974. These supermarkets accounted for more than 90 percent of the fresh and processed meat sold through retail food stores in Texas during 1974. The Texas retail grocery industry for this study is classified as shown in Table l. Firms with ll or more storeslj predominate in the l I O I O —/Reference to retail firms with ll or more stores excludes convenience firms in this study unless convenience firms are specifically men- tioned. It does include affiliated independent organizations. " ‘s: 11 Texas retail food industry. The second most important group on the basis of numbers are convenience firms, but these firms accounted for only a small proportion of the meat items sold at retail. Volume and Type of Meat Handled Chain grocery firms and affiliated independent organizations which owned or serviced ll or more stores accounted for more than 86 percent of the fresh and processed meat itemsgj sold during 1974, followed by firms with less than ll stores and l to 3 supermarkets with almost 8 percent of the total (Table 6), Convenience firms with ll or more stores made up about one—third of the grocery stores but merchandised less than one percent of the fresh and processed meat in Texas. Steer and heifer beef, primarily fed beef, represented almost 40 per- cent of the meat handled by retailers (Table 6). Next in importance were smoked and cured pork, cow and bull beef and fresh pork. The importance of ground meat is understated in Table 6 since much of the cow and bull beef is sold as ground meat. Veal and lamb continue to be low volume items at the Texas retail level. The kind of meat items handled by retailers in 1974 represented a substantial change from 1959 (1). Total beef in l959 represented 31 per- cent of the fresh and processed meat items handled compared with 52 per- cent in 1974. Calf and veal, primarily calf, made up 23 percent of the total in 1959 compared with 8 percent in 1974. The higher proportion of beef, especially steer and heifer, handled by retailers in 1974 as compared with 1959 is reflective of consumer demands and changing live- 2 . . . —/"Fresh and processed meat items" or meat refers to red meat items in this study. Retail connotes items sold for home consumption. .wmmn ummwws UGQ uwwuw cw wmwsaucw I R .©03QH>H@uGH muflwwcommmu %n wmuuomwu m¢oz\M .wEouH umwa wmmmsuusm no wwmmm\fl @Q.@¢H ._ m.H w.“ ~.¢ N. ~.@w Hmuoa m.w m. m. m. N. w.@ umsuo wcm %umHum> .mwmw:mm 9w R 9 R R Tm Rumwa wasfiw 9S H. 9 9 R 9S i3 H935 93 N. 9 9 R Na i3. Hmwfi m. \W \w \W \M m. couusfi no Ha@H 2 Ill l I "- 1 H. EH F E R H. 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STORES, 1974 56 FORM OF MEAT SALES, BY KIND OF MEAT, IN TEXAS GROCERY FIRMS WITH ll OR MORE Form of meat sales Kind of Sub- Retail Ground meat Carcass Quarters Primals primals cuts meat Total Percent Steer and heifer beef .4 .7 .4 .6 82.3 15.6 100.0 Cow and bull beef y y y y y 100.0 100.0 Calf .8 y y y 87.2 12.0 100.0 Veal y y y y 98.2 3.8 100.0 Lamb or mutton lj lj ll 1/ 96.7 3.3 100.0 Fresh pork 1/ 1/ .5 1/ 99.3 .2 100.0 Cured pork y y y y 100.0 y 100.0 Ground meatéj _§/ Z] Z] 2/ 100.0 Z] 100.0 Sausage, variety and other y y y y 100.0 y 100.0 lJNone reported by respondents interviewed. 2/Not applicable. Q/ APPENDIX TABLE 22. Purchased as ground meat. STORES AND 4 OR MORE SUPERMARKETS, 1974 FORM OF MEAT SALES, BY KIND OF MEAT, IN TEXAS GROCERY FIRMS WITH LESS THAN ll Form of meat sales Kind of Sub- Retail Ground meat Carcass Quarters Primals primals cuts meat Total 9ercent Steer and heifer beef .1 .3 lj 1.2 85.6 12.8 100.0 Cow and bull beef y y y y .4 99.6 100.0 Calf_ y y y y 88.1 11.9 100.0 Veal y _l_/ y y y y y Lamb or mutton y y y y 97.2 2.8 100.0 Fresh pork y y _l_/ y 100.0 y 100.0 Cured pork 2/ _2_/ 2/ 2/ 100.0 _2_/ 100.0 Ground meatll 2/ 2/ 2/ 2/ 100.0 2/ 100.0 Sausage, variety and other y y y y 100.0 _2_/ 100.0 2/None reported by respondents interviewed. Z/Not applicable. 3/ — Purchased as ground meat. 5 7 APPENDIX TABLE 23. FORM OF MEAT SALES, BY KIND OF MEAT, IN TEXAS GROCERY FIRMS WITH LESS THAN ll STORES AND l TO 3 SUPERMARKETS, 1974 Form of meat sales Kind of Sub— Retail Ground meat Carcass Quarters Primals primals cuts‘ meat Total Percent Steer and heifer beef .4 .2 If lj 76.6 22.8 100.0 Cow and bull beef lf lj If I] 6.6 93.4 100.0 Calf y y y y 90.0 10.0 100.0 Veal . y y y y 100.0 y 100.0 Lamb or mutton _l/ 1/ 1] _l/ 100.0 _l/ 100.0 Fresh pork 1/ 1] 1] _L/ 99.4 .6 100.0 Cured pork Z] _Z/ Z] Z] 100.0 2] 100.0 Ground meaty y _2_/ y y 100.0 y 100.0 Sausage, variety and other Z] 2/ Z] Z] 100.0 Z] 100.0 L/None reported by respondents interviewed. Z/Not applicable. 3/ —-Purchased as ground meat. APPENDIX TABLE 24. FORM OF MEAT SALES, BY KIND OF MEAT, IN TEXAS GROCERY FIRMS WITH LESS THAN ll STORES AND NO SUPERMARKETS, 1974 Form or meat sales Kind of Sub— Retail Ground meat Carcass Quarters Primals primals cuts meat Total Percent Steer and heifer beef 6.9 7.8 1]‘ _l/ 63.8 21.5 100.0 Cow and bull beef lj .3 ‘If _l/ 37.7 62.0 100.0 Calf _ y y y y y y _2_/ Veal y y y y 50.0 50.0 100.0 Lamb or mutton _l/ If If _l/ 100.0 _l/ 100.0 Fresh pork y y y y 100.0 y 100.0 Cured pork _3_/ y _3_/ y 100.0 _3_/ ‘ 100.0 Ground meati/ Q] _§/ Q] Q] 100.0 §] 100.0 Sausage, vgriety and other _§/ Q] Q] §] 100.0 §] 100.0 l/None reported by respondents interviewed. 2/Included with steer and heifer beef. 2/Not applicable. 4/ —-Purchased as ground meat.