The beef industry—including all the processing and final product sectors—also faces a consumer base that is experiencing declining inflation-adjusted incomes. The net result is that fewer Americans even bother stopping at the meat counter, pick cheaper cuts of beef, and opt for pork, chicken, and other cheaper protein substitutes.

The US beef industry is in the midst of one of its largest two-year declines in beef production. This will have significant ramifications for everyone from consumers to cattle producers. Consumers will face higher retail prices than they did in 2023.

Per capita beef consumption in the US has been on a relative decline since we were taken off the Bretton Woods Gold Standard, but in the last couple of years there have been significant declines. With reduced herd sizes and prices sky high, that decline seems unlikely to be reversed in 2025. We may get some relief in the intermediate term, but I fear the long-term nutritional decline that current trends dictate.

Based on my own anecdotal evidence, the high price of beef steaks and roasts makes people grumpy. It also undermines health because beef meals are highly nutritional and provide very high-quality protein. I personally don’t accept the government’s public relations campaign against beef and butter.

One thing is for sure, Americans followed the guidelines, but the expected results did not materialize, quite the contrary. Diabetes and obesity are at all-time record highs. Heart attack deaths have declined, but surely most of that is due to better detection and care, the hundreds of thousands of bypass and stent operations every year, and better emergency medical services.

Is there a magic wand to solve the problem of high beef prices, as well as high pork and chicken prices? Actually yes, begin by returning to the gold standard or at least don’t allow the Fed to target interest rates or increase the money supply. Remove the wild swings in the market and make investment more certain. The second day, release vast amounts of federally-controlled land and eliminate the ethanol program that diverts corn into our gasoline. Peace in Ukraine and the Middle East would unleash more food and fuel for the human population and this translates to improvements for the people directly impacted and to the general world population. Also, pursue efforts to roll back environmental restrictions and open up oil and gas production, which will reduce farming and fertilizer prices, as well as increase production and jobs generally.

All of this combined would drive up people’s real incomes, greatly reduce the cost of beef, and stimulate beef production. Within one production cycle, the American family would be back to their once-a-week steak nights.