Biden unveils plan to boost competition in U.S. meat industry
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[January 04, 2022] By
Leah Douglas
(Reuters) -The United States will issue new
rules and $1 billion in funding this year to support independent meat
processors and ranchers as part of a plan to address a lack of
“meaningful competition” in the meat sector, President Joe Biden said on
Monday.
The initiative comes amid rising concerns that a handful of big beef,
pork and poultry companies have too much control over the American meat
market, allowing them to dictate wholesale and retail pricing to profit
at the expense of their suppliers and customers.
“Capitalism without competition isn’t capitalism. It’s exploitation,"
Biden said. "That’s what we’re seeing in meat and poultry industries
now.”
A recent White House analysis found that the top four meatpacker
companies https://www.reuters.com/business/how-four-big-companies-control-us-beef-industry-2021-06-17
- Cargill, Tyson Foods Inc, JBS SA, and National Beef Packing Co -
control between 55% and 85% of the market in the hog, cattle, and
chicken sectors.
The Department of Agriculture (USDA) will spend the $1 billion from
American Rescue Plan funds to expand the independent meat processing
sector, including funds for financing grants, guaranteed loans, and
worker training, said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, who was
speaking at an event with Biden.
USDA will also propose rules this year to strengthen enforcement of the
Packers and Stockyards Act and to clarify the meaning of "Product of
USA" meat labels, which domestic ranchers have said unfairly advantage
multinational companies that raise cattle abroad and only slaughter in
the United States.
Attorney General Merrick Garland, also speaking at the event, said “too
many industries have become too consolidated over time,” and that the
antitrust division of the Department of Justice has been chronically
underfunded.
The Biden administration issued an executive order last year that
advocated a whole of government approach to antitrust issues.
A central concern in agriculture has been meat prices, which have risen
at a time when the White House is fighting inflation. An analysis in
December by the White House economic council found a 120% jump in the
gross profits of four top meatpackers since the pandemic began.
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A worker stacks packets of ground beef in the meat section of a
Costco warehouse club during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
pandemic in Webster, Texas, U.S., May 5, 2020. REUTERS/Adrees Latif
The meat industry has said the White House analysis was inaccurate and
criticized the new plan.
National Chicken Council President Mike Brown called the plan “a solution in
search of a problem.”
North American Meat Institute spokesperson Sarah Little said staffing plants
remains the biggest issue for meatpackers and that the White House plan would
not address it.
“Our members of all sizes cannot operate at capacity because they struggle to
employ a long-term stable workforce,” she said. “New capacity and expanded
capacity created by the government will have the same problem.”
Eric Deeble, policy director at the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition,
cheered the plan, calling it a “very positive step to ensure farmers and
ranchers receive fair prices.”
The anticipated rulemaking under the Packers and Stockyards Act “could have a
significant impact,” said Peter Carstensen, emeritus professor of law at
University of Wisconsin-Madison and former antitrust attorney at the Department
of Justice. But he noted that investment in independent processing itself would
not address market concentration.
Austin Frerick, deputy director of the Thurman Arnold Project at Yale
University, an antitrust research center, said the plan does not go far enough
to tackle the power of the top meatpackers.
"I do not believe this (plan) will meaningfully change the concentration
numbers," he said.
(Additional reporting by Diane Bartz and Trevor Hunnicutt;Editing by Marguerita
Choy)
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