@article{Vergamini:312983,
      recid = {312983},
      author = {Vergamini, Daniele and Bartolini, Fabio and Brunori,  Gianluca},
      title = {Wine after the pandemic? All the doubts in a glass},
      journal = {Bio-based and Applied Economics Journal},
      address = {2021-03-31},
      number = {1050-2021-1256},
      month = {Mar},
      year = {2021},
      abstract = {COVID-19  has  triggered  an  unprecedented  global   crisis,  the  increasing  recessions  in  many  countries   and  related  trade  uncertainties  are  affecting  the   whole  wine  sector,  from  production  to  distribution,   sales,  and  consumption.  While  the  full  recovery  is   still  uncertain,  and  even  worse  scenarios  are   possible  if  it  takes  longer  to  recover  trust  and   financial  stability  on  wine  markets,  the  crisis   risks  to  jeopardies  recent  developments  and   sustainability  in  wine  territories.  Building  on  a   tailored  revi-sion  with  a  mixed-method  participatory   research  process  of  the  conceptual  framework  on   Condition,  Strategies,  and  Performance  of  Grando  et   al.  (2020),  we  offer  a  critical  reflection  made  by   researchers  and  stakeholders  supporting  several   socio-econom-ic  narratives  and  policy  implications  in   the  light  of  the  current  crisis.  Distinguishing   between  short  and  long-term  implications,  we  analyse   the  impact  of  disruptive  chang-es  in  the  external   and  internal  conditions  of  the  business  environment,   the  strategies  adopted  by  the  wineries  and  their   implication  on  performances,  as  well  as  a   reflec-tion  on  the  policy  needs  to  alleviate  the   ongoing  suffering  of  the  sector.  The  speed  and   scope  of  the  pandemic  crisis  underscore  the  need   for  the  wine  sector  to  become  more  resilient  by   increasing  the  ability  to  cooperate  and  coordinate   among  supply  chain  actors  and  between  policy  levels.   The  latter  offers  a  reflection  on  the  balance   between  short-term  interventions  and  the   complementarity  of  post-2020  CAP  measures  to   sta-bilize  market  and  future  incomes.  We  conclude   that  once  the  crisis  abates,  it  will  be  necessary   to  reaffirm  credible  commitment  and  trust  at  all   levels,  not  only  with  regard  to  production  side  but   also  on  sale  and  distribution,  especially  in  the   face  of  changing  consumption patterns that in the future  will become more pressing for issues related to safety and  sustainability.},
      url = {http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/312983},
      doi = {https://doi.org/10.22004/ag.econ.312983},
}