# Potential economy-wide impacts of an African swine fever outbreak in the United States

**Authors:** Tais C. de Menezes, Amanda M. Countryman, Dustin L. Pendell, Jonathan Rushton, Jimmy Tickel, Heather Simmons

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2026.1752899 · 2026-02-02

## TL;DR

This study estimates the economic impact of an African swine fever outbreak in the U.S., showing that large outbreaks could cause billions in welfare losses and disrupt global pork markets.

## Contribution

The novelty lies in quantifying economy-wide impacts of ASF using a CGE model under various outbreak and trade restriction scenarios.

## Key findings

- Large ASF outbreaks could reduce U.S. pork production by 7.25%-10.8% and increase pork prices by 6.5%.
- U.S. welfare losses could reach $10.9-$11.4 billion in large outbreak scenarios, with global hog and pork prices rising by up to 3.69%.
- Early detection and regionalization strategies could significantly reduce economic and market disruptions.

## Abstract

African swine fever (ASF) poses a major threat to the U.S. pork sector, with potentially large spillovers through domestic markets and international trade. To inform preparedness and policy design, we quantify the economy-wide consequences of a hypothetical ASF outbreak under alternative scenarios of production losses and export restrictions.

We use a computable general equilibrium (CGE) model to simulate four hypothetical ASF scenarios that vary by outbreak size and export restrictions. The model endogenously captures adjustments in production, prices, bilateral trade flows, and welfare, and we assess robustness using systematic sensitivity analysis.

Small outbreak scenarios generate limited sectoral disruption and no substantial GDP effects, with U.S. welfare losses of $310–$563 million. Large outbreak scenarios reduce U.S. hog production by 7.34%–8.57% and pork production by 7.25%–10.8%, increase U.S. hog producer prices by 41.6%–41.8% and pork prices by 6.5%, and reduce U.S. GDP by 0.05%. Corresponding U.S. welfare losses rise to $10.9–$11.4 billion. Globally, large outbreaks increase world hog and pork prices by 3.67%–3.69% and 1.20%–1.22%, respectively, and drive trade diversion toward alternative exporters.

The results indicate that the economic costs of ASF increase substantially with outbreak size and are shaped by the severity of trade restrictions. Investments that prevent escalation (early detection, rapid containment) and strategies that preserve market access (credible regionalization/zoning arrangements) can substantially reduce welfare losses and global market disruption.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** African swine fever (MONDO:0025377)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** ASF (MESH:D000357)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12908596/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12908596