Brief - The Hustle

The farming industry is going hog wild trying to get rid of 2.5B pounds of meat

Written by Conor Grant | Jun 30, 2020 10:04:15 AM

Recent trade disputes have decreased global demand for American agricultural products, causing a surplus of more than 2.5B pounds of meat.

While the price of your frozen meatballs may fall, the unpredictable market is a disaster for farmers and agricultural producers — and while a recently approved $12B bailout will buy (some) farmers time, it won’t stabilize volatile markets.

For ranchers, it’s an inconvenient time for a trade war

Due to increasing consumer demand, ranchers are projected to produce a record 102.7B pounds of meat this year. But China and Mexico recently passed meaty tariffs (62% and 20%, respectively) on US pork. 

Now, cold-storage warehouse owners are scrambling to expand their operations to keep meat cold so farmers can sell it. 

But in the meantime, bacon waits for no man — prices for pork have already dropped 14% as supply continues to exceed demand. 

We hope you’re hungry, America

’Merica’s meat market isn’t the only one in trouble — the US stockpile of cheese also recently hit 1.39B pounds, causing problems in the dairy industry. 

To prevent farmers from completely choking on their cheese, the Trump administration passed a $12B emergency relief fund to insulate farmers from protectionist policies. 

But farmers have already lost an estimated $13B from the recent tariffs. If the US remains as tariff-happy as it has been in recent months, those losses will continue to increase — and 3.89B pounds of rotting cheese and meat is gonna stink…