'Trick or Treat?' The Misrepresentation of American Beef Exports in Britain During the Late Nineteenth Century

Posted: 4 Jun 2010

See all articles by David Higgins

David Higgins

University of York - The York Management School

Dev Saif Gangjee

Faculty of Law, University of Oxford

Abstract

This article examines the misrepresentation of American beef in the British market between c. 1890 and c. 1913. We examine the complaints voiced by British consumers, producers, and retailers and we discuss the response of the British government and the United States Department of Agriculture. A new dataset is employed to calculate the price premiums that could be earned from the misrepresentation of beef according to geographic origin. While considerable premiums could be earned by “passing-off” American beef as British in the 1890s, these premiums declined during the 1900s. Particular emphasis is placed on the inability of the British government to act unilaterally on meat marking. This article also considers origin as a means of distinguishing between categories of nonbranded goods. Yet “origin” has many dimensions. Not only does it indicate provenance, it sometimes signals quality associated with provenance while also serving as the basis for protectionist responses. This article therefore contributes to the broader debates surrounding origin marking as a commercial and legal phenomenon.

Suggested Citation

Higgins, David and Gangjee, Dev S., 'Trick or Treat?' The Misrepresentation of American Beef Exports in Britain During the Late Nineteenth Century. Enterprise & Society, Vol. 11, No. 2, pp. 203-241, 2010, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1612645 or http://dx.doi.org/khp080

David Higgins

University of York - The York Management School ( email )

Sally Baldwin Buildings
Heslington
York, North Yorkshire YO10 5DD
United Kingdom

Dev S. Gangjee (Contact Author)

Faculty of Law, University of Oxford ( email )

St Hilda's College
Cowley Place
Oxford, OX4 1DY
United Kingdom

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