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Why are British books like this one so good? I have noticed that British publications are usually more creative and interesting than American ones. Perhaps it is because they look at subjects from a global perspective. Or maybe it is that the authors seek to educate their readers as well as entertain them. Whatever the reason, it is hoped there will be more such books to come.
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"Food Processing: An Industrial Powerhouse in Transition," by John M. Connor and W. A. Schiek, is not a textbook, and it doesn't contain much economic analysis: it is best thought of as a data handbook with commentaries.
Connor and Schiek (C&S hereinafter) provide a ready source of numbers on a wide variety of industry topics, and the industrious reader can use the table source citations as a ready research guide to the available industry data sources.
Given the authors' goals and the inevitable space constraints of the book. I don't believe that they could have included more analysis.
On topics that energize them, such as that on food demand and consumer choices in chapter 8, the book does a very nice job of interweaving basic theory, the results of formal demand analyzes, and the information that can be gleaned from item-level supermarket scanner data, while at the same time conveying the strengths and weaknesses of the several data sources for the issues at hand. This section provides a very nice overview on key issues on the demand side of food marketing, and I expect that I'll rely on it frequently. But on other topics, such as the very lengthy chapter on location, the presentation turns repetitive.
One of the book's real strengths lies in its demonstration of the variety of different data sources, aside from the well-known Census of Manufactures, that provide useful support for analyzes of food processing. Experienced researchers as well as managers, analysts, and grad students should be able to mine these pages for new and improved sources of information.
C&S show a keen appreciation of the construction of food demand and consumption measures, along with the strengths and weaknesses of the associated data sets. Similarly, they show a sophisticated understanding of market structure statistics in a short space, and accurately convey the difficulties inherent in attempting to measure rates of new product introductions. But I'd like to see some closer attention paid to the problems of developing useful price indexes.
In general, C&S provide an authoritative one-stop guide to food industry statistics and to the construction of those statistics--the footnotes can almost be lifted out as a separate commentary on data construction. While I wouldn't suggest that anyone should try to read the book through in a few sittings, it should continue to occupy a market niche as an indispensable quick source for anyone relying on food industry statistics.
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I remember buying it, it was at some sort of book fair at my elementary school. I think it was the same day as parent-teacher conferences, although I don't remember well. I remember picking out that book (and another book about the "black sheep squadron" which was my favorite TV show). As I recall my Mom wasn't crazy about me getting it.
I'm older now (well, I'm OLD now), but I'd give a lot to curl up with that book again.
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