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How 4 companies control the beef industry - YouTube
Channel: Vox
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Every Friday, ranchers around
South Dakota bring their cattle here
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to this livestock auction
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just outside the small town
of St.Onge
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to be sold by this man
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Justin Tupper, the owner and auctioneer
at St. Onge Livestock.
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TUPPER: So, a lot of guys bringing in
those cows.
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They're bringing them in
for the normal sale day.
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St. Onge livestock is a family business.
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TUPPER: Emily's helping clerk, Maggie's been
helping outside, Cody'll be here in a little
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bit and he'll work the night shift, and Brooke,
my wife, is doing the books.
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Justinâs sale barn facilitates millions
of dollars in sales on a day like today.
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TUPPER: I would guess somewhere between
three and five million.
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And it happens like this.
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Cattle get dropped off in this pen.
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Then theyâre tagged and shuffled along this
labyrinth-like system.
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Until itâs their turn to be sold, and they
enter the sale barn here.
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This ring is actually a huge scale, so bidders
know how much the cattle weigh.
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As the bidders, who are other ranchers,
watch from the stands
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Justin or another auctioneer lead the auction
with whatâs called a chant.
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(indistinct auction chant)
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TUPPER: So that's what the auction
is all about.
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It's trying to get a fever pitch that get
you to bid one or two more times more than
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you anticipated because you're
caught up in the moment.
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Bidders are looking at the cowsâ weight,
breed, and age, and considering outside factors
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like the weather and the futures market.
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An almost imperceptible raise of the hand
indicates a bid.
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And it all ends with the highest bidder.
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(indistinct auction chanting) Sold!
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This process happens more than
100 times that day.
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It is price discovery at workâcreating a
value for a commodity
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in this case through, friendly competition.
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TUPPER: When they come into
the cafe , they'll sit
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and visit with each other
and be very cordial.
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TUPPER: Sooner or later, they'll be split up
out in the seats
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and they'll be bidding against each other.
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Small farmers and ranchers selling their product
at auction has a long legacy in the US.
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And the stakes are high
for people selling cattle.
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For some, the highest bid on this board is
all the money theyâll make that year.
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And lately those prices havenât been enough
for many of them to make it.
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In the past 50 years, about 40% of cattle ranchers
have gone out of business.
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Healthy competition in a market means that
there are numerous small producers and buyers
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who compete equally for a commodity.
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And as a result, not one player exerts
outsized control over its price.
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But in the American beef industry,
somethingâs off-balance.
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And itâs ruining the competition for everyone.
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The buyers and sellers coming to these auctions
represent the different stages of cattle ranching
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all of which are affected by a lack of
competition in the industry.
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KAMMERER: I'm Matthew Kammerer
from Rapid City, South Dakota.
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Matthew is a cow-calf producer,
a small-scale rancher who breeds cows
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and raises calves on grass
until a certain age.
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KAMMERER: From getting up and all kinds of
weather and times at night to check on
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first calf heifers, to branding in the springtime,
putting up hay for feed in the winter.
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KAMMERER: And hopefully we bring one hell
of a product here for the backgrounder.
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A backgrounder is the next ranch cattle usually
cycle through â another small or medium-scale
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ranch where calves graze until
they reach a certain weight.
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VEURINK: I buy from the producer
who raise that calf as a baby.
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They'll feed them to an age of
seven hundred pounds.
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Then a backgrounder sells to a feedlot,
like this one.
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THOMPSON: I'm Ted Thompson from
Lakewood, South Dakota.
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We take cattle to feed yards
and finish cattle.
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Just like it sounds, finishing cattle is the
last step of the cattle production cycle.
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The feedlot owner then sells the finished
cattle to the meatpacker, the company that
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slaughters them and sells their meat to consumers.
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Companies like Tyson or National Beef.
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These three types of ranchers
do all of their sales
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through competitive bidding
at livestock auctions like Justinâs.
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But the sale between feedlot owners
and the meatpackers looks a lot different.
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And that has to do with this powerful player
and over a century of history.
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KELLOWAY: The creation of our antitrust laws
really is tied to the meat industry.
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Claire Kelloway, is a reporter and researcher
on consolidation in agriculture.
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KELLOWAY: I report on everywhere where corporate
power shows up across the food supply chain.
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KELLOWAY: Around the turn of the century,
there were highly consolidated meatpackers.
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They were called the Beef Trust.
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Five companies controlled most of the market.
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KELLOWAY: That's generally considered
excessively concentrated.
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And so you have risks of companies not competing
for the lowest prices.
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All different kinds of what we would consider
anti-competitive or unfair behavior.
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KELLOWAY: It prompted an outcry over the prices
and conditions for farmers who are working
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with these meat packers.
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In 1921, President Warren Harding signed the
Packers and Stockyards Act into law
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to assure fair competition and to safeguard
farmers and ranchers.
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In the decades after this law was passed,
the top four meatpacking companies in the
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beef industry controlled about 25 percent
of the market.
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Thatâs under the 40 percent threshold
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of whatâs considered an
overly concentrated market.
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Under the Reagan administration, the US legal
system transformed their approach to big business.
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KELLOWAY: Around the nineteen eighties,
a really conservative school of economic thought
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took over a lot of policy, including antitrust.
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KELLOWAY: And this allowed for a super permissive
antitrust policy.
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What followed was 40 years of mergers and
acquisitions, especially in the meatpacking
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industry, without the US government intervening.
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Over that same time, while ranches
went out of business
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feedlots got a lot bigger to service
their corporate customers.
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KELLOWAY: This drive to become bigger and
to cut costs, pushing more destructive forms
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of livestock production.
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KELLOWAY: So, the rise of
more concentrated animal farms
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which have huge externalized costs
on the environment.
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The result is a beef industry where the top
four companies process 85 percent
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of all the cattle produced in the US
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well above the anti-competitive threshold.
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Today, those companies are Tyson, JBS,
Cargill and National Beef.
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And if you eat beef, you more than likely
buy it from them
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when you shop at a
conventional grocery store.
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KELLOWAY: Concentration might not be something
that most people see.
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KELOWAY: There are some big name brands
that we're familiar with.
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KELLOWAY: But because these companies
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have bought up a lot of other companies
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it creates sort of an illusion of choice.
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The fact that just 4 companies buy and process
nearly all the beef in the US
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creates a bottleneck here
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between them and the feedlot owners
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who buy from the backgrounders
and cow-calf producers.
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The public might only see the vulnerabilities
of this structure when disaster strikes.
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Like when a fire took out
a Tyson plant in 2019.
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When multiple meatpacking plants shut down
in 2020 due to the covid pandemic.
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Or, in 2021, when JBS underwent a cyber attack,
forcing plant closures.
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During these events, they paid ranchers less,
and charged consumers more.
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In a July 2021 Senate hearing,
a Tyson representative
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attributed this price spread
to the law of supply and demand
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because of closed plants,
the supply of live cattle
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outpaced processorsâ ability
to process those cattle.
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But many people see the reliance on so few
plants to process cattle as exactly the problem.
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KELLOWAY: Cattle producers who are saying
this is clear evidence of highly concentrated
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meat packers using their position in the middle
of the market to maximize their profits.
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Before the industry got so concentrated again
in the 80âs, meatpacker representatives
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from different companies used to fill these stands
like everyone else
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contributing to price discovery and
higher prices for ranchers.
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But today they arenât there.
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KELLOWAY: Packers don't like bidding for cattle.
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They want to be running their plants
at full capacity and
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they want to know how much cows
are coming in.
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Thatâs why about 72% of the sales in 2021
between feedlot owners and meatpackers is
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through a contract instead of an auction
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which removes them completely from
the price discovery process.
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The other 28% is still negotiated.
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But with only four big meatpackers there are
fewer bids, and they typically
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don't take place
at an auction.
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Instead, buyers from the packing industry
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often go straight to the
feedlot owner like Ted.
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THOMPSON: They'll typically go around to feed
yards and see their show list.
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TUPPER: Many times they don't see any buyers.
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They may get a phone call from them and say...
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THOMPSON: This is what we'll give today.
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TUPPER: There's not a competitive nature that
happens there.
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In Colorado, for example, 2 years of USDA reports
like this one, show negotiated cattle prices
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as âconfidentialâ because there are
so few bidders that disclosing prices
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might reveal who the bidder is, a violation
of confidentiality laws.
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More competition raises praises, something
a cattle rancher, like Brad, knows from experience.
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I gotta check this one.
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He paused our interview to bid on a livestream
open auction at a sale barn.
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There's all the information,
just like you see the sale barn, 14 head.
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(indistinct auction chant)
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I'm gonna bid right here.
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(indistinct auction chant)
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So did it go through?
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Yep.
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(indistinct auction chant)
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See, he tells me.
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(indistinct auction chant)
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I'm gonna stay out.
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(indistinct auction chant)
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-So you didn't win that one?
-Nope.
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No, it was too high?
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That's where I want to stop, 70 bucks.
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So what did you do for the person
that won that bid?
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I think he is asking 160.
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So between me and the people
in the seats there.
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That's 40 bucks that rancher put in his pocket
just because he had competitive people per calf
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and then that's a huge deal in a lot
of times it's make or break.
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TUPPER: Probably the most important bidder
in the price discovery or the auction process
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is the guy who didn't get it
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because he bid against the guy who
got them right up to the last bid
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so he drove that price there.
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Not having those competitive bids for the
sale between meatpackers and feedlot owners
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means Ted might get a lower price.
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Which means they have less to bid on
for the backgrounder, like Brad.
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And the backgrounder has less to give
to the cow-calf producer, like Matthew.
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And that trickle-down effect is one reason
why about 40% of cattle ranches
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have disappeared since 1980
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which means rural America has lost
hundreds of thousands
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of small family businesses.
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I'm wondering whether you're worried about
the survival of your business?
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Yup.
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It's a legacy out there.
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And it's not gonna get any easier
for these families.
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It's losing the legacy of the family,
the family ranch and stuff.
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KAMMERER: Great grandpa came her in 1882.
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KAMMERER: And I live in the same log house
that he built.
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TUPPER: It's infuriating.
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Think of what some of that money... if it
would have trickled down to the countryside
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where we would be.
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"The Senate agriculture committee looked
at cattle industry markets
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including the rise in beef prices."
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In 2021, the US government started investigating
whether lack of competition in cattle markets
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requires legal or policy intervention.
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And Justin Tupper was there to testify.
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JOHN THUNE: I want to welcome to the committee,
Mr. Justin Tupper.
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TUPPER: Since 2015 corporate packers gross
margin has ballooned from average of
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100-200 a head to well over 1,000 a head
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while cattle producers go out of business and
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consumers pay double or even triple at the meat counter.
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Solutions to promote competition include a
proposed bill that would reduce the amount
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of contract sales between feedlot owners and
meatpackers from 72% to 50%.
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Or making it easier for more meatpacking companiesâmore
bidders, in other wordsâto enter the market.
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To enforcing antitrust laws that were created
for this very purpose.
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The American rancher also serves
as a symbol of independence.
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But they've lost their independence from the
few corporations that control the beef industry
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and make it impossible to compete
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Thanks for watching this first episode
of our series with Future Perfect
[821]
a team at Vox that explores big problems
[824]
and the big ideas that can help tackle them.
[827]
We'll be diving into crucially important issues
[830]
like climate change, animal welfare,
and global health.
[834]
We'll be exploring them through angles
that are often neglected
[837]
and identifying the most effective solutions.
[839]
In this first season, we're looking at
the human cost of meat.
[843]
The current scale of industrial meat production
undoubtedly has an impact on animals
[848]
but it also deeply affects people.
[850]
People who consume meat,
people who work in the meat industry
[853]
and people who live next to
factory farms.
[856]
In future episodes, we'll be looking at
[858]
other ways that the meat industry
has changed the way people work and live.
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