To be fair, this is how industrial food systems are designed to operate: we consumers are not supposed to think about where our food comes from.
Recently, while cooling off in a pool in Arizona (USA), I overheard a conversation. As they bobbed on foam noodles, a group was bemoaning the high cost of pot roast. “Have you seen the prices?!” Heads shook in knowing commiseration, for meat prices had indeed increased noticeably. The conversation rolled along covering in great detail exactly where pot roast could be bought for the cheapest prices.
I was interested in this conversation because I knew food prices
were climbing, and people generally were concerned about food
inflation. In February this year, global food prices reached the
highest level ever. They had increased by 24.1% in the last year. 1
And the cost of that pot roast? While food prices were climbing,
Tyson Foods,2 the U.S.’s largest meat corporation by sales,3 posted
a $1 billion profit the first quarter of 2022–up 48% from that same
quarter the year before.4 This seemed confusing to me because, in
the same period, meat prices in the U.S. increased by an average of
13.1%.5
How could this be? How could Tyson Foods and other meat corporations
report spectacular profits when consumers were feeling a tighter
pinch to their wallets every time they bought meat? When Tyson Foods
CEO Donnie King celebrated these company earnings, he said, “The
company worked closely with customers to pass along that inflation
through price increases.”6
There we go. That’s how this can be. The company–read this with
giant air quotes–“worked closely with consumers.” How did they do
this? By setting much higher prices for meat, and letting consumers
pay for those increases. 13.1% increases, to be exact. Their
profiteering has, in fact, increased inflation.7 It's hard not to
feel incredulous anger toward this industry and the corporate
systems that enable their activities!
However, as expensive as it is now, I’ve learned that the true cost
of pot roast isn’t simply the money paid at the cash register. There
are costs that are hard to see behind the price tags, and these
costs have everything to do with corporations gaining dominance in
the business of animal farming. To talk about both the overt and
hidden costs of meat in the U.S., it’s important to identify the
source of the problem: the corporatization of the nation’s–and
world’s–food systems.
I grew up hearing the narrative that the U.S. is a patchwork of
small family farms–from the “amber waves of grain” to the “fruited
plain”. I believed that each of these family farms is a healthy
ecosystem of crop varieties and different farmed animal species
feeding the country in the most wholesome ways. This was once true
but not anymore. This image is so strong, however, I didn’t realize
how much the country’s land and foodscapes have changed in just my
lifetime of fifty-some years.
A 2008 report produced by the Pew Commission found that over the
past seventy years industrialized production has replaced the
traditional, decentralized family farm system as the dominant
reality of animal farming in the U.S. today.8 In this concentrated
system, there are far fewer farm operations, and each is enormous in
scale, holding large numbers of animals of the same species in
enclosed, crowded conditions that restrict the movement of the
animals. In addition, this model of industrial farm animal
production employs far fewer workers than the decentralized system.
Animal production on this scale is driven by corporations. If a
person eats meat, eggs, or dairy products in the U.S. without
deliberately sourcing from the small farms that are the exceptions,
the animals have been factory-farmed and processed by a handful of
corporations that are politically powerful. Their dollars speak
loudly in state legislatures and in the lobbying halls of Washington
D.C. They dominate U.S. animal agriculture, such that many small
family farms have gone out of business.9 Sadly, many countries
around the world have also adopted this corporate production model.
How did I not know this? Because the world is urbanizing and, like
many people, I’ve only lived in cities. I don’t often see what’s
happening in rural areas where food is produced. I don’t see the
enclosed concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) and
industrial facilities that don’t look at all like the picturesque
family farms I thought dotted the countryside. I don’t see the
trucks carting live, frightened animals from the CAFOs to be killed
at meat processing plants. And, I don’t see the poorly paid CAFO and
slaughterhouse workers living in rural poverty because they aren’t
my close geographical neighbors. As Christopher Carter writes in his
important book The Spirit of Soul Food: Race, Faith, and Food
Justice, “To be fair, this is how industrial food systems are
designed to operate: we consumers are not supposed to think about
where our food comes from.”10
References