Disaster Beef Prices Soar to All-Time High - U.S. beef prices have surged above $18 per pound, straining household budgets. Declining cattle herds, droughts, tariffs, and inflation are driving costs up.

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https://www.newsweek.com/beef-prices-all-time-high-tariffs-2112771
https://archive.ph/7W8fX
Beef prices surged to an all-time high in July as the market grappled with consistently strong demand and long-term issues in domestic production.
According to the latest consumer price index, which the Bureau of Labor Statistics published on Tuesday, the beef and veal index rose by 2.5 percent in July, compared to 0.2 percent for the broader food category. This capped an 11.3 percent increase over the past 12 months.
Meanwhile, the price of ground beef and uncooked beef steaks has risen by 11.5 and 12.4 percent, respectively, both now at record levels.

Why It Matters

The rising cost of staple agricultural goods such as beef and eggs has put additional strain on Americans' budgets this year. While the latter has moderatedafter breaking records in February, shrinking cattle herds continue to weigh heavily on the price of the former. Given the long-term remedies required to address inventory issues, and the prospect of new import taxes threatening to further trim the overall supply in the U.S., experts have told Newsweek that it could be years before prices return to more affordable levels for consumers.

What To Know

Average ground beef prices rose to a record $6.34 per pound in July, while uncooked beef steaks also reached an all-time high of $11.88 per pound. In July 2024, those figures stood at $5.62 and $10.86, respectively.

These figures represent raw price changes rather than seasonally adjusted figures and have not been modified to remove predictable price patterns.
The unadjusted 11.3 percent increase seen for all beef and veal products compares to a 5.8 percent jump for the general meats category, 3.3 percent for chicken and 1.1 percent for pork.

The issue of rising beef prices in the U.S. has long been on the radar of policymakers and agricultural experts, who largely attribute this to declining cattle herds that are incapable of meeting demand, as well as a growing reliance on imports and periodic battles with adverse weather.
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"Everybody likes a good hamburger and steak," agricultural economist David P. Anderson told Newsweek. "It's that demand growth coupled with tighter supplies that push prices higher."

According to the latest cattle inventory calculations from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), there were 94.2 million head of cattle and calves on U.S. farms as of July 1, of which 28.7 million were beef cattle. This compares to 94.4 million and 31.3 million in January 2020.

In a monthly report released on Tuesday, the USDA forecast that the total beef supply in the U.S. would drop to 31.1 billion pounds by August 2026, the lowest level since 2019.

Derrell Peel, a professor of agribusiness at Oklahoma State University, previously told Newsweek that since 2020, droughts in major beef-producing areas—alongside inflation, grain prices and rising interest rates—had driven up the cost of cattle farming and pushed many producers to trim their herds.

Years of price hikes have also made the U.S. a more attractive market for foreign producers and increased the country's overall reliance on beef imports. However, the recent imposition of tariffs on exporting nations threatens to impair the ability of foreign-sourced beef to soften the blow of rising prices.

The top sources of imported beef are Australia, Canada, Mexico, New Zealand and Brazil, according to the USDA. While beef originating from Canada and Mexico is currently exempt under the U.S.-Canada-Mexico Agreement, Brazil—which has accounted for about 15 percent of U.S. beef imports in 2025—has been slapped with a 50 percent tariff on all goods coming into the U.S.
According to a recent USDA report, total beef imports are expected to drop 6.1 percent to 4.95 billion pounds by August of next year. In its forecasts, the department said the decline reflected "reported trade data through the first half of the year, as well as reduced shipments due to higher tariff rates, particularly from Brazil."

What People Are Saying

Sylvain Charlebois, a professor of food distribution and policy at Dalhousie University, Canada, told Newsweek: "Short term, there's no quick fix. It takes years to rebuild herds, and ranchers won't start expanding until they're confident feed prices and weather patterns stabilize. If we get a couple of good grazing years and feed costs come down, you could see prices plateau late next year or into 2027. A slowdown in consumer demand—maybe from a weaker economy—could also ease prices, but that's not something producers are rooting for."

Agricultural economist Derrell Peel previously told Newsweek: "It might be at least two to three years before we would see any significant change on the supply side that would ultimately lead to some moderation in beef prices."

Agricultural economist David P. Anderson told Newsweek: "In the big picture, there is not much relief in sight as long as supplies are tight and consumers keep buying. High prices are the cure for high prices because they are the signal for ranchers to try to expand their herds. If some herd expansion begins, it will still be a couple years before that increases beef production."

Colin Carter, a professor of agricultural and resource economics at UC Davis, told Newsweek in July: "Due to reduced domestic cattle numbers and record-high beef prices, the percentage of imported beef in the U.S. supply has risen significantly in the past few years. This is especially true for imports used for ground beef as U.S. cow slaughter numbers have declined."

He added: "The Trump administration has increased tariffs on imported beef, and this will serve to further raise the price of beef at the food store."

What Happens Next

Some of the experts who spoke with Newsweek believed prices could decline modestly in the coming months after the mid-season peak in demand.
 
Do normies give much of a shit that beef is higher cause of tariffs? I'd rather have ranchers employing people to raise cattle, than have cheap beaner beef from a communist shithole like Brazil.
 
Do normies give much of a shit that beef is higher cause of tariffs? I'd rather have ranchers employing people to raise cattle, than have cheap beaner beef from a communist shithole like Brazil.
I dunno, it just looked like maybe this is the newest media push to get people to hate Trump so I posted it.
 
Do normies give much of a shit that beef is higher cause of tariffs? I'd rather have ranchers employing people to raise cattle, than have cheap beaner beef from a communist shithole like Brazil.
There's a limit to how quickly you can grow herds, and an affordable larger workforce isn't just going to spawn out of thin air. Americans already living here by and large aren't willing to work a dirty job like this for what it pays, and the niggers that crowd in want to live in the cities on gibsmedats. So the price will continue to climb even if you source it domestically.
 
The Fort is located in Califagnia cattle country, and while on recon trips I see more and more for sale signs. Beef costs an arm and a leg, but there are so many greedy middlemen that the rancher at the bottom doesn't see hardly any of that money. Ranchers are finally saying fuck it all and liquidating their herds and trying to dump their land, and in some cases just loading up the truck with family heirlooms and driving off, abandoning their land. Food producers are so crushed by taxes and regulations and continued cuts in what they get from ginormous food corporations that even the biggest operations simply can't do it anymore. What happens when a nation no longer produces their own food is fucking famine. One big black swan event and people will be eating each other, and not just niggers.
 
I wouldn't be surprised there's a massive amount of government red tape to stifle the meat industry. It is wild to see how the American Fast Food industry given up on beer in favour of chickens.
 
These figures represent raw price changes rather than seasonally adjusted figures and have not been modified to remove predictable price patterns.
And here is why the entire article is bullshit. How does the data look after a seasonable adjustment? If tariffs were to blame, why is it only affecting two types of beef and not all of it? Prices of specific cuts spike and drop all the time.
 
The Fort is located in Califagnia cattle country, and while on recon trips I see more and more for sale signs. Beef costs an arm and a leg, but there are so many greedy middlemen that the rancher at the bottom doesn't see hardly any of that money. Ranchers are finally saying fuck it all and liquidating their herds and trying to dump their land, and in some cases just loading up the truck with family heirlooms and driving off, abandoning their land. Food producers are so crushed by taxes and regulations and continued cuts in what they get from ginormous food corporations that even the biggest operations simply can't do it anymore. What happens when a nation no longer produces their own food is fucking famine. One big black swan event and people will be eating each other, and not just niggers.
All right. How about you stay over on the other side of the room, niggerchomper69.
 
Wow, beef is more expensive. Makes me wanna abandon rules and laws and borders and allow neoliberal slave labor and sheeeeeeeeit.
 
long winded self-entitled rant about how steak is a human right and EBT is supposed to cover everything a negro wants to eat or it's just to steal it
 
The Fort is located in Califagnia cattle country, and while on recon trips I see more and more for sale signs. Beef costs an arm and a leg, but there are so many greedy middlemen that the rancher at the bottom doesn't see hardly any of that money. Ranchers are finally saying fuck it all and liquidating their herds and trying to dump their land, and in some cases just loading up the truck with family heirlooms and driving off, abandoning their land. Food producers are so crushed by taxes and regulations and continued cuts in what they get from ginormous food corporations that even the biggest operations simply can't do it anymore. What happens when a nation no longer produces their own food is fucking famine. One big black swan event and people will be eating each other, and not just niggers.

thanks for this reminder to buy from a local farmer today
 
Absolute bullshit.

Beef from other countries isn't more expensive than it was. The price of wagyu hasn't gone up. In fact, wagyu prices are now less than twice regular beef prices at some of the markets around here.

Suddenly free-range Argentine beef is cheaper than cornfed midwestern beef. Something's wrong here, just like it was when the egg producers ran up prices on all the cheap eggs but the blue and brown free range eggs were the same price as always.

Also, weren't tariffs supposed to crater international demand for feedstocks and make it cheaper to feed American beef?
 
Absolute bullshit.

Beef from other countries isn't more expensive than it was. The price of wagyu hasn't gone up. In fact, wagyu prices are now less than twice regular beef prices at some of the markets around here.

Suddenly free-range Argentine beef is cheaper than cornfed midwestern beef. Something's wrong here, just like it was when the egg producers ran up prices on all the cheap eggs but the blue and brown free range eggs were the same price as always.

Also, weren't tariffs supposed to crater international demand for feedstocks and make it cheaper to feed American beef?
Economic sabatoge is occurring and there is a purposeful punishment of the plebs for voting against rhe interests of the powers that be.
I mean maybe that's a conspiracy but slowly it feels more and more like the people In charge hate the masses of people they rule.
 
I had a ribeye from a local farm today. Got it from their stand down at the farmer's market. Expensive as shit but absolutely delicious. It was like a pound. Ate it all in one sitting, save a few slices to fancy up my 30¢ ramen later.

The price was worth it, both for the quality of the product and to support local agriculture.
 
This is a liberal conspiracy designed to hurt King Pedo
Biden would have done the same thing
This isn't happening at all, don't believe your lying eyes
This is already or always going to happen anyways and is absolutely not our fault
Eat the bugs Beef is a small price to pay for straight white utopia
 
The GDP can't always go up. Price can't always go down. Correction doesn't mean vibes. Cut even more regulations and impose even more tariffs
 
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