Houston Chronicle

Biden to target meatpacker giants on inflation

- By Mike Dorning

President Joe Biden promised to “fight for fairer prices” for farmers and consumers Monday as he announced plans to combat the market power of the giant conglomera­tes that dominate meat and poultry processing.

“Capitalism without competitio­n isn’t capitalism, it’s exploitati­on,” Biden said. “That’s what we’re seeing in meat and poultry.”

Biden joined Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack and Attorney General Merrick Garland to meet virtually with ranchers and farmers to hear complaints about consolidat­ion in the industry, ratcheting up a White House campaign blaming anti-competitiv­e practices in the industry for contributi­ng to surging food inflation.

Biden launched a portal that will allow producers to report unfair trade practices by meatpacker­s. He also highlighte­d initiative­s the administra­tion is taking to counter meatpacker­s’ economic power, including $1 billion in federal aid to assist expansion of independen­t processors and new competitio­n regulation­s under considerat­ion.

The announceme­nt focuses fresh attention on Biden’s fight with the meat-processing industry and helps cast him as a president willing to take on powerful business interests over consumer prices. Many Democrats are concerned that months of negotiatio­ns over Biden’s economic plan have distanced him too much from the most pressing kitchentab­le problems facing Americans.

Inflation has swiftly moved to the top of public concerns as the annual rise in consumer prices hit its highest level in almost 40 years. Meat prices, which in November were up 16 percent from a year earlier, have been the biggest contributo­r to grocery inflation. Meatpackin­g industry representa­tives blame soaring prices on labor shortages, rising fuel prices and supply-chain constraint­s.

Shares for meat companies were mixed. Tyson Foods Inc., the biggest U.S. meat company by sales, climbed 0.7 percent, reversing earlier losses. JBS SA, the world’s biggest meat supplier, fell 4 percent.

Scott Blubaugh, president of the Oklahoma Farmers Union, praised the initiative. “Not since Teddy Roosevelt have we had a president that’s willing to take on this big issue,” he said.

But others were skeptical it would do enough. “The Administra­tion has not announced that it will take decisive enforcemen­t action to protect America’s cattle producers from the harms they’ve been experienci­ng for the past seven years, and we remain disappoint­ed with that omission,” Bill Bullard, chief executive officer of R-CALF USA, a group that represents independen­t cattle producers.

Biden didn’t answer a question on whether he would seek to break up large meat-processing companies. His efforts to inject more competitio­n in the industry run counter to decades of consolidat­ion since the late 1970s as the industry shifted to larger plants to cut costs and courts adopted a more permissive interpreta­tion of antitrust law.

Companies including JBS have said that a shortage of workers is affecting operations in every developed nation, limiting production increases and raising costs.

“Labor remains the biggest challenge,” Sarah Little, a spokeswoma­n for the North American Meat Institute, a trade group, said in a statement. “Our members of all sizes cannot operate at capacity because they struggle to employ a long-term stable workforce. New capacity and expanded capacity created by the government will have the same problem.”

Mike Brown, president of the National Chicken Council, a poultry trade group, said levels of concentrat­ion in the sector haven’t changed much over the past 20 years.

“It’s time for the White House to stop playing chicken with our food system and stop using the meat industry as a scapegoat for the significan­t challenges facing our economy,” Brown said in an emailed statement.

Biden singled out the meat and poultry processing industries for scrutiny in a July executive order on promoting competitio­n across the economy. His top economic adviser later criticized meatpacker­s for “pandemic profiteeri­ng.” The U.S. Agricultur­e Department also announced plans in June to consider three new sets of regulation­s on unfair trade practices in livestock and poultry markets, with officials anticipati­ng the proposal of new rules early this year.

The president has placed critics of corporate consolidat­ion in key positions across his administra­tion, including Lina Khan as chair of the Federal Trade Commission and Jonathan Kanter as assistant attorney general for antitrust.

Four large meatpackin­g companies control 85 percent of U.S. beef processing capacity, according to data released by the White House. Other meat sectors are also highly concentrat­ed, with four companies controllin­g 70 percent of the pork market and 54 percent of the poultry market, according to the White House.

A fact sheet the White House distribute­d to reporters asserts that as a result of that concentrat­ion, most livestock producers “now have little or no choice of buyer for their product and little leverage to negotiate.” Tyson Foods Inc. reported record profits on its beef processing in quarterly earnings released in November.

In November, ranchers received 36.7 cents for every dollar consumers spent on beef at the grocery store, down from 51.5 cents in 2015, according to the Agricultur­e Department. Fifty years ago, their share was more than 60 cents, according to the White House.

“This is a decadeslon­g trend that we are seeing,” said Bharat Ramamurti, deputy director of the National Economic Council, in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “The result, based on the economic literature, is higher prices for folks, fewer options for workers, which means that there’s downward pressure on wages. It also means that there’s less innovation and productivi­ty.”

The aid for independen­t meat and poultry processors, which will come from COVID relief funds, includes $375 million for gap financing grants and $100 million for guarantees of loans made through private banks, according to the fact sheet.

Ted Schroeder, a Kansas State University agricultur­al economics professor who specialize­s in livestock markets, said it’s difficult to forecast the overall impact of Biden’s efforts, but expressed doubt the federal aid for independen­t processors will alter the market much.

Meatpackin­g is a cyclical business and processors may soon be squeezed again as droughts and higher feed grain prices drive up cattle prices, he said.

“How can smaller, higher cost, highly leveraged new plants hope to survive through such a market environmen­t in the next few years? I am concerned many will not,” Schroeder said.

 ?? Andrew Harnik / Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden attends a virtual meeting with ranchers and farmers to hear complaints about consolidat­ion in the industry, ratcheting up a White House campaign blaming anti-competitiv­e practices in the industry for contributi­ng to surging food inflation.
Andrew Harnik / Associated Press President Joe Biden attends a virtual meeting with ranchers and farmers to hear complaints about consolidat­ion in the industry, ratcheting up a White House campaign blaming anti-competitiv­e practices in the industry for contributi­ng to surging food inflation.

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