Competitive position of lard in the market of animal and vegetable fats and oils

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Date
2017-05-25
Authors
Schickele, Rainer
Schultz, Theodore W.
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Extension and Experiment Station Publications
It can be very challenging to locate information about individual ISU Extension publications via the library website. Quick Search will list the name of the series, but it will not list individual publications within each series. The Parks Library Reference Collection has a List of Current Series, Serial Publications (Series Publications of Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service), published as of March 2004. It lists each publication from 1888-2004 (by title and publication number - and in some cases it will show an author name).
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Abstract

Lard ranks second among the domestically consumed fats and oils, exceeded only by butter. Lard constitutes about one-sixth of the total value of hog products. It is one of our most important export commodities; between 85 and 90 percent of the lard entering international commerce is of American origin. Yet in spite of its economic importance, especially to the hog producers of the Corn Belt, practically no work has been done to investigate the production and market characteristics of lard and its competitive position relative to other fats and oils. The literature dealing with the market situation of butter, margarine, tallow, coconut oil and other vegetable oi ls is fairly extensive but, peculiar as it seems, lard has never been dealt with in a systematic and comprehensive manner.

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