Analysing Economic Performance of Wine Estates Across Three Decades - What can we Learn for the Future?

In recent decades, the German wine market has undergone significant structural changes due to intensifying competition and shifting consumption patterns. Increased imports and declining exports have pressured German wine estates to adapt for survival. The study explores these long-term trends and s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anthony William Bennett, Simone Mueller Loose
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2025-05-01
Series:Wine Economics and Policy
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Online Access:https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/wep/article/view/17778
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Summary:In recent decades, the German wine market has undergone significant structural changes due to intensifying competition and shifting consumption patterns. Increased imports and declining exports have pressured German wine estates to adapt for survival. The study explores these long-term trends and structural changes in German wine estates, focusing on those marketing bottled wine. It aims to understand how these businesses have adapted to economic pressures in a highly competitive market from 1993 to 2020, using business panel data and regression analysis for 16 key performance indicators (KPIs). At first (until the financial crisis of 2008) estates benefitted from mechanisation and economies of scale, leading to a significant reduction in labour hours per hectare and moderate increases in wine prices, improving labour productivity and profitability. However, yields declined due to a shift towards lower-yield grape varieties in response to market demand. From 2009 onward, rising labour and material costs as well as stagnating yields started eroding profitability gains, leading to an overall stagnation of long-term profitability. When observing differences in developments between size groups, large wine estates experienced a considerably sharper increase in costs per ha than small to medium sized wine estates, from 2009 onward. Nonetheless, this could be counterbalanced by large wine estates also generating significantly higher productivity increases in the same time period, resulting in a significant increase in profitability for large wine estates from 2009 onward, while small to medium sized wine estates stagnated.
ISSN:2213-3968
2212-9774