The São Paulo wholesale seafood market: A study of fish prices in Brazil
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3059766Utgivelsesdato
2022Metadata
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Originalversjon
Pincinato, R. B. M., Oglend, A., Bertolini, R. M. B., & Muñoz, A. E. P. (2022). The São Paulo wholesale seafood market: A study of fish prices in Brazil. Aquaculture Economics & Management, 26(3), 259-282. 10.1080/13657305.2022.2079762Sammendrag
We analyze fish pricing in the São Paulo wholesale market, the second largest seafood market in South America. Quantitative price analysis is complemented by interviews with participants in the value chain to answer how the multitude of fish products supplied in this market are related and the challenges facing future growth. The results reveal a clear separate pricing of domestically produced fishery species (whitefish and pelagics) from the internationally traded aquaculture species (tilapia and salmon). Tilapia and salmon are uniquely priced, less volatile and more persistent with a price dynamic more akin to local terrestrial meats. Fishery prices show large month-by-month fluctuations and compete more with each other. Participants in the different levels of the value chain corroborate the uniqueness of salmon and state a preference for stable availability and low prices, with less concern about the specific sourcing of fish (aquaculture/fisher, or domestic/imported).