|
In less than two weeks, millions upon millions of Americans fire up the grill to cook up some burgers for the Fourth of July — unless they’ve decided the beef for those burgers is just too expensive.
The price of a pound of ground beef is up almost 13% compared to May of last year, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. The cost has more than doubled over the past 15 years.
The USDA predicts beef prices will go up another 10% in 2026 — much faster than the rate of inflation. High demand and low supply makes for a perfect storm, said Jamie Luke, a professor of agriculture, food and resource economics at Michigan State University.
“Right now we have a historically low number of beef cows in the country,” she said.
“Producers have had to make that difficult call to reduce the number of animals they have in their herd to be able to have enough forage to feed,” Luke said.
And that’s just the supply side.
“Personally, I think the bigger story in beef prices is the consumer demand side,” said Brian Coffey, a professor of agricultural economics at Kansas State University. |