Title: Wine Clusters
1Wine Clusters
- New Products, Marketing and Rural Development
- June 20, 2005, Sonoma California
- Daniel A. Sumner
- University of California Agricultural Issues
Center and UC Davis Department of - Agricultural and Resource Economics
2Analysis of the Price of Winegrapes Regression
Price of Grapes P (Year, Variety, District)
3What Determines the Price of Wine? Regression
Price of Wine P (Appellations, Variety, Score,
Age, Vintage, Vineyard, Reserve)
4Sample of Grape Growing Costs Definition /
Example
- Operating Cost all the expenses that are
assigned to a particular operation during the
year (planting, cultural, and harvest costs). - Example Chardonnay in SonomaOperating Cost
2,900 /acre.Source UC Cooperative
Extension, Karen Klonsky
5Sample of Grape Growing Costs Definition /
Example
- Cash Overhead Cost various cash expenses paid
out during the year that are assigned to the
whole farm (property taxes, interest on operating
capital, office expense, liability and property
insurance, and equipment repairs). - Example Chardonnay in Sonoma Cash Overhead Cost
1,635 /acre.Source UC Cooperative Extension
6Sample of Grape Growing Costs Definition /
Example
- Non-Cash Overhead Cost capital recovery cost
for land, equipment and other farm investments. - Example Chardonnay in SonomaInterest rate
assumed 7.40Non-Cash Overhead Cost 4,660
/acre.Land Recovery 2,590 /acre. - Important the land price is assumed as given in
the Non-Cash Overhead Cost, thus in the Total
Cost.Source UC Cooperative Extension
7Sample of Grape Growing Costs/Revenue
8Sample of Grape Growing Costs/Revenue
- The revenue for Chardonnay grapes in Sonoma
covers largely the Total Cost of Production, and
even more there is a rent of 3,000 /acre. Why
isnt the price of land in Sonoma higher? - The price of land in Lodi cannot support the
costs of production of Cabernet grapes in the
area. Either the price of land is too high, or
the price of grapes is too low.
9Illustration of Value - Added Up Down the
Marketing ChainCompare 3 illustrative
examplesCabernet Napa, Chardonnay Sonoma,
Cabernet Lodi
10Illustration of Value-added Up Down the
Marketing Chain
11Illustration of Value-added Up Down the
Marketing Chain
12Effect on Wine Prices of a Land Price
IncreaseExample Chardonnay Sonoma, land price
increase of 10,000 /acre
13Another Way to Estimate theEffect on Wine Prices
of a Land Price IncreaseExample Chardonnay
Sonoma, land price increase of 10,000 /acre
14Price Endogeneity and Price Elasticity?
Price of wine
Supply of wine
P0
P1
Returns to Land
D0
D1
Quantity of wine
15Effect on Land Prices of a Wine Price
DecreaseExample Chardonnay Sonoma, wholesale
price decrease of 0.10/bottle
16Substitution Effects
- We did the calculations, assuming that there is
no substitution effects between inputs. - However, there may be some adjustments happening
along the chain that would allow for less
rigidity in the results. - If for example we assume that a decrease in wine
prices would affect not only land but also other
inputs supply and demand (oak use, cork and glass
prices, etc), the impact on land prices would be
smaller.
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20Agricultural location and agglomeration
- Agronomic basics determine location, terroir does
matter for quality wine grapes. - Transport costs matter for heavy and cheap
agricultural raw materials. - Processing depends on raw materials and vice
versa so the location of processing is not a
mystery either. - So does the cluster idea make any contribution?
- Knowledge and information positive spillovers are
easier within regions (space still matters, we
are meeting here even though we are all on the
web - Local input supplies depend on some local scale
economies
21Agricultural location and agglomeration
- Hypothesis
- Higher quality high prices raw material can be
economically shipped farther for processing. - High value per of transport cost.
- If transport costs of raw materials is the major
issue clustering would matter more for cheap wine
and less for fancy wine. - Will this allow a test of the importance of
- local input suppliers
- Local knowledge networks?
- But terroir probably matters more for fancy wine.
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23Networks in the wine industries of Italy Chile
Case study by Giuliani
24Network density actual no. links / max. possible
no. of links
Note The positioning of nodes does not refer to
geographical distances between firms. The
network draws on a directed 32x32 matrix.
Linkages represent the existence technical advice
knowledge flows between any two nodes considered.
The direction of arrows indicate the direction of
knowledge flows.
25Note The positioning of nodes does not refer to
geographical distances between firms. Linkages
represent the existence technical advice
knowledge flows valued 3 between any two nodes
considered. The direction of arrows indicate the
direction of knowledge flows.
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27Wine clusters in Italy and Chile
- Most empirical evidence shows that only a small
subset of the firms actively participate in the
knowledge diffusion process at intra-cluster
level and in the absorption of extra-cluster
knowledge, while the bulk of firms are either
peripheral or totally disconnected from the
intra-cluster knowledge system.
28Sources
- Guiliani, E. 2004. Laggard clusters as slow
learners, emerging clusters as locus of knowledge
cohesion (and exclusion) A comparative study in
the wine industry. LEM Working Paper No.
2004/09, Laboratory of Economics and Management,
Sant'Anna School of Advances Studies, Pisa,
Italy. - Giuliani, E. and Bell, M. 2005. The
micro-determinants of meso-level learning and
innovation evidence from a Chilean wine
cluster. Research Policy 3447-68. - Porter, M. 1990. The competitive advantage of
nations. London Macmillan. - von Hippel, E. 1987. Cooperation between rivals
informal know-how trading. Research Policy
16291-302. - von Hippel, E. 1994. Sticky information and
the locus of problem solving implications for
innovation. Management Science 40(4)429-439.