China’s massive pig farms spark a supply glut as hog prices hit 8-year low
China is experiencing a significant drop in pork prices, hitting an eight-year low due to a supply glut. This oversupply is attributed to the rapid expansion of large-scale industrial pig farms in recent years, outpacing consumer demand.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedChina is experiencing a significant drop in pork prices, hitting an eight-year low due to a supply glut. This oversupply is attributed to the rapid expansion of large-scale industrial pig farms in recent years, outpacing consumer demand. Live pig prices averaged 11.05 yuan per kilogram in the third week of March, a substantial decrease from the previous year. The falling pork prices are creating economic challenges for Beijing, hindering efforts to combat deflation and squeezing profit margins for pig farmers who are simultaneously facing rising costs due to global events impacting grain and feed prices. The consolidation of the pork industry after the African swine fever outbreak facilitated the growth of these massive farms, some of which compromise meat quality, further exacerbating the supply imbalance.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedPrices are now at their lowest level since June 2018.
Live pigs were selling for 11.05 yuan (US$1.60) per kilogram on average during the third week of March.
China’s pig prices have plunged to their lowest level in nearly eight years.
Some firms have even built vast, multi-storey hog farms capable of raising more than 1 million pigs per year.
The hog glut was caused by the spread of industrial-scale farms in China’s pork industry.