You Are What You Eat: Focus Shifts to Animal Diets

According to results of a recent survey funded by the United Soybean Board, the old saying, “You are what you eat,” is not only about consumers. It's about what animals eat, too.
According to results of a recent survey funded by the United Soybean Board, the old saying, “You are what you eat,” is not only about consumers. It's about what animals eat, too.
(Farm Journal)

According to results of a recent survey funded by the United Soybean Board, the old saying, “You are what you eat,” is not only about consumers. It's about what animals eat, too.

While many consumers are concerned about their own diet, the survey found that nearly 70% of respondents say animal diet is extremely or very important to their decision-making process. This is an increase from 51% in 2019. 

Specifically, the respondents are looking for meat from animals fed a high-quality, nutritious diet (51%) and raised humanely (49%), with knowledge of where the meat comes from also a top concern (47%), explains the USB report.

Desire for U.S. Meat
There's good news for U.S. livestock producers.

The survey found that 41% of consumers are willing to pay significantly more for meat coming from animals that were born and bred in the U.S.

The report notes that older generations are looking for meat from domestically raised animals, with 60% of Boomers and 50% of Generation X consumers prioritizing meat from animals raised and fed by U.S. producers.

Food Labels
Not only do consumers want to know where their meat was raised, they are taking the time to look at food labels before making a purchase.

Based on answers from the 2,000-plus consumers surveyed, results show that nearly all U.S. shoppers pay some attention to food labels. The survey found:

-    63% of consumers almost always read food labels

-    33% sometimes pay attention to food labels

-    4% do not often pay attention to labels

“It's inspiring to see the growing support for inclusive label transparency rather than exclusive marketing tactics,” says Wendy Vlieks, vice president of communications for USB, in the release. “This emphasizes the pivotal role of factual information on food labels across the food industry, where informed choices directly influence consumer behavior.”

Animal Diet
For producers, the importance of animal feed is multi-faceted. Considering cost and nutrition needs, producers carefully consider the needs of animals and how it affects their bottom lines. Meanwhile, survey results found that animal feed is also important to consumers.

Specifically, 43% of consumers are more likely to purchase meat if the labels indicate the animals were fed a vegetarian diet including soybeans. Furthermore, consumers place a higher importance on antibiotic-free meat, or from animals not fed synthetic ingredients, compared to animals fed a vegetarian diet or soybeans.

“It’s no secret that for poultry, livestock and seafood, U.S. soybean meal is an excellent source of nutrients including protein, which is why we grow our own soybeans to feed the pigs on our farm,” says Carla Schultz, checkoff farmer-leader and soybean and pig farmer from Michigan in the USB release.

Among the list of top ingredients in animal feed, corn, wheat and soybeans are what consumers prefer to see.

As a producer, it's important to understand the end destination of your product raised—the consumer's table, and how these survey results might be worth exploring in your operation.

Read More: 

5 Emerging Types of Consumer: A Breakdown of Meat Eaters

 

Latest News

Markets: Cash Cattle Rebound, Futures Notch Four-Week High
Markets: Cash Cattle Rebound, Futures Notch Four-Week High

After a mostly sluggish April, market-ready fed cattle saw a solid rally in the North and steady money in the South. Futures markets began to look past the psychologically bearish H5N1 virus news.

APHIS To Require Electronic Animal ID for Certain Cattle and Bison
APHIS To Require Electronic Animal ID for Certain Cattle and Bison

APHIS issued its final rule on animal ID that has been in place since 2013, switching from solely visual tags to tags that are both electronically and visually readable for certain classes of cattle moving interstate.

How Do Wind, Solar, Renewable Energy Effect Land Values?
How Do Wind, Solar, Renewable Energy Effect Land Values?

“If we step back and look at what that means for farmland, we're taking our energy production system from highly centralized production facilities and we have to distribute it,” says David Muth.

Ranchers Concerned Over Six Confirmed Wolf Kills in Colorado
Ranchers Concerned Over Six Confirmed Wolf Kills in Colorado

Six wolf depredations of cattle have been confirmed in Colorado from reintroduced wolves.

Profit Tracker: Packer Losses Mount; Pork Margins Solid
Profit Tracker: Packer Losses Mount; Pork Margins Solid

Cattle and hog feeders find dramatically lower feed costs compared to last year with higher live anumal sales prices. Beef packers continue to struggle with negative margins.

Applying the Soil Health Principles to Fit Your Operation
Applying the Soil Health Principles to Fit Your Operation

What’s your context? One of the 6 soil health principles we discuss in this week’s episode is knowing your context. What’s yours? What is your goal? What’s the reason you run cattle?