Showing posts with label ground beef. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ground beef. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2026

"We got this, we got this" USDA says about Plan B after Plan A began too late, with too little urgency, and will be short of the needed 500 million sterile screwworm flies until 2028 at the earliest

We are so screwed, so to speak. 

Hamburgers will never be cheap as long as Donald Trump is president.

 

 Flesh-eating screwworm is confirmed in the U.S., officials say

... "The United States has defeated this pest before, and we will do it again," the USDA said.

... Dudley Hoskins, undersecretary for marketing and regulatory programs at the USDA ... “USDA invested heavily in the tools needed to eliminate NWS ever since cases started increasing in Central America and Mexico,” Hoskins said. “The United States has defeated this pest before, and we will do it again.” ... 

 Confirmed screwworm case in Texas sends two biotech stocks higher

... regional director of the Federal Crop Agency ... “We just had a conditional use drug approved; U.S. producers can handle it.” 

August 15, 2025: 

In Texas cattle country, ranchers brace for flesh-eating screwworms: The devastating pests have crossed Central America. Despite stepped-up efforts, there are not enough sterile flies to stop them.

... Washington has halted cattle imports from Mexico and invested millions in setting up a new sterile fly production plant in Metapa, Mexico. But it will take roughly a year to come online. 

 ... The U.S. eliminated screwworms in the 20th century by flying planes over hotspots to drop red-striped boxes packed with sterile flies, sometimes called “cupcakes” by ranchers. The USDA constructed a fly production plant in Mission, Texas, in 1962, that pumped out 96 trillion flies until it was decommissioned in 1981. Now the USDA is planning to resurrect the plant to disperse sterile flies, while Texas officials have scattered 100 screwworm traps along the border.

USDA inspectors known as Tick Riders who patrol the border on horseback to guard against another pest, the cattle fever tick, have also been tasked with conducting screwworm preventive treatment for all cattle and horses they find in the border area.

At the heart of the problem is an unworkable math equation. The USDA estimated 500 million flies need to be released weekly to push the fly back to the Darien Gap. At its maximum, the Panama plant produces just 100 million. 

“It’s an overwhelming situation at this point,” Dr. Lansford said. “Screwworm is obviously doing well in Mexico, and they’re up against the same challenges we are.” ...

October 21, 2025: 

Mexico’s major initiative to eradicate the screwworm will be ready in July 2026: The government is overhauling a fly production complex in Chiapas to make it the ‘world’s most modern’ facility of its kind, capable of manufacturing millions of sterile specimens as a chemical-free form of pest control

... Moscamed, as the factory is called, will begin manufacturing 100 million sterile flies by July 2026. ...

Until now, the sterile flies that are spread throughout the country to combat the screwworm plague (100 million each week) are brought from a plant managed by the Panama-United States Commission for the Eradication and Prevention of the Cattle Screwworm (Copeg), in Panama, where they have been working at maximum capacity to control the pest since January 2025. ...

With the other leg of the project, the construction of a manufacturing plant for these flies in Texas, international efforts project a production of up to 500 million flies per week, which will be released throughout the region. If international cooperation continues, myiasis could be eradicated in less time than the first time. Some representatives of Senasica have even talked about achieving this goal in five years. ...

USDA didn't break ground on the Texas facility until two months ago.

April 17, 2026: 

USDA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Break Ground on New Texas Sterile Fly Production Facility

 ... Initial operational capability targeted for November 2027, reaching production of 100 million sterile flies per week. 

Construction continues immediately beyond initial operations to scale full production capacity to 300 million sterile flies per week. ...

This new state-of-the-art facility will complement USDA’s ongoing production of 100 million sterile flies per week at the Panama-based COPEG facility. USDA has also invested $21 million to support modernization of Mexico’s Metapa, MX facility, expected to be operational in summer 2026. ... 

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Gold and silver are still up 5+% year to date

 SPX +10.52% ytd

WTI +53.11% ytd

 

Meanwhile in April: 

Hamburger +18.9% yoy

Coffee +29.0% yoy

Unleaded regular gasoline +28.0% yoy

Electricity +7.2% yoy

Natural gas +3.1% yoy

[Trump 9/21/2024: "We will cut your energy prices in half. Mark it down . . . within 12 months . . ."] 

Milk +1.5% yoy

Whole Chicken -1.6% yoy 

Eggs -56.1% yoy

Tomatoes +50.0% yoy

 

And: 

30-year mortgage average monthly, above 6% since August 2022

Full time jobs above 50% of population just 6 of the last 25 quarters, all under Joe Biden


 

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

My morning coffee, my Sunday hamburger, my Italian tomatoes, pasta and olive oil, and now even my salad

I coulda mentioned salad the other day, but I didn't.

The average price made a new record high in 1Q2026. 


  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Why BLTs and salad just got more expensive — tariffs, war send tomato prices soaring

This story is about fresh tomatoes, not salad, and it is interesting, but the average price of tomatoes in 1Q2026 still hasn't surpassed 1Q2016.

Adjusted for inflation since 1Q1980, tomatoes could cost $2.64 per pound, but they were only $1.98 in 1Q.

As the story says, canned tomatoes are much cheaper. I make my sauce from stewed whole plum tomatoes from a can, preferably Italian, preferably San Marzano or Parma, but there are many acceptable American brands to choose from. 

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Friday, February 13, 2026

I can no longer has cheezburger under Donald J. Trump

 100% ground beef hit a new all time high average price of $6.752/lb in Jan 2026.

 



 

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

100% ground beef averaged a record $6.089 in year one of Trump 2.0, and hit a record high $6.687 in Dec 2025 to celebrate the New Golden Age for them, not for you

 Like many other such graphs, the graph for 100% Ground Beef won't show the 2025 average because the government shutdown meant no figure for October in the data.

The average $6.089 in 2025 is for eleven months without October, with October obviously a high figure, too, which means the annual average is no doubt higher than $6.089.

 



 

Monday, October 27, 2025

Prices of 20 food items posted new all time highs on a quarterly average basis under Donald Trump in 3Q2025

 The 20 foods shown making new all time highs represent 43% of the 46 foods I have been tracking in the FRED database at the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank. Prices are per pound unless otherwise noted.

Beef Products:

Round Roast $8.182
All Uncooked Roasts 8.72 
Choice Chuck Roast 8.839
Round Steak 9.04
All Uncooked Steaks 12.12
Choice Sirloin Steak 14.003
Ground Chuck 6.43
100% Ground Beef 6.298
All Uncooked Ground 6.593
 
Other Meats:
 
Whole Chicken 2.072
Pork 3.716
 
Dairy Products:
 
Ice Cream 6.425/half gallon
Cheddar Cheese 6.071
 
Other Foods:
 
Orange Juice 4.682/12oz. frozen
Coffee 8.808 
Sugar 1.043 (two quarters in a row)
Bananas 0.664
Potato Chips 6.84
Chocolate Chip Cookies 5.179
Beer 1.832/pint 

Saturday, August 16, 2025

All eight beef prices I track made new record average highs in July 2025

Adjusted for inflation since July 1984, 100% ground beef should cost $3.88/lb in July 2025, but it's actually 61% higher than that.

 


  

100% Ground Beef $6.254/lb

Ground Chuck 6.338

Round Roast 7.909

All uncooked beef roasts 8.397

Choice chuck roast 8.439

Round steak 8.69

All uncooked beef steaks 11.875

Choice sirloin steak 13.554 

 


 

Tuesday, July 22, 2025

Food items making new all time high average prices in the United States in June 2025

 


 All prices are FRED data from the St. Louis Fed in U.S. dollars.

 

The headlines are correct. Average beef prices are out of this world in June 2025:

Round Roast $7.762/lb

All Uncooked Beef Roasts $8.203 

Ground Chuck $6.103

Choice Chuck Roast $8.197 

100% Ground Beef $6.12

All Uncooked Ground Beef $6.342

All Uncooked Beef Steaks $11.491

Choice Sirloin Steak $12.923.

 

But that's not all:

Whole Chicken $2.086

Frozen Orange Juice Concentrate $4.493

Coffee $8.132

Potato Chips $6.815

Ice Cream $6.493.

 

Most of the other items in my list of over 40 basic food products remain near their average all time highs. Food price inflation was 3% year-over-year in June 2025. There has been no actual food price deflation since 2016.

 


 

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Food items making new all time high average prices in the United States in May 2025

 All prices are FRED data from the St. Louis Fed in U.S. dollars.

 

Ground Chuck 6.018/lb

Coffee 7.931

White Sugar 1.054

Bananas 0.655

Potato Chips 6.731

Ice Cream 6.466/half gallon

100% Ground Beef 5.981/lb

All Uncooked Ground Beef 6.245

American Cheese 5.063

Beer 1.834/pint 

Sunday, May 18, 2025

Eleven foods which made new all-time high average prices in April 2025

 Round roast $7.616/lb
All roasts 7.995
Round steak 8.627
All steaks 11.12
Sirloin steak 12.326
Ground chuck 5.996
100% ground beef 5.801
All ground beef 6.142 

Coffee 7.536
Sugar 1.021
 
Beer 1.827/pint

Saturday, April 19, 2025

18 things which set new price records on an average basis in 1Q2025: beef, beef, and more beef, ice cream, sugar, coffee, OJ, chicken, American cheese, beer, wine, eggs, electricity

 

sirloin

chuck roast

beef roasts

beef steaks

ground beef

ice cream

sugar

coffee

orange juice

chicken

ground chuck

round steak

round roast

American cheese

beer

wine

electricity

eggs

Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Ten foods making new all time high average prices in March 2025 per FRED Economic Data

Round roast $7.557 per pound
Round steak $8.554
Ground chuck $5.854
Ground beef 100% $5.79
Ground beef all $6.137
Beef steaks all $10.98
Eggs $6.227 per dozen
Coffee $7.385 per pound
White sugar $1.014
Beer $1.821 per pint
 

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Beef, breakfast, and bliss just went up again: A dozen basic foods posting new all time high average prices in February 2025 according to the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank

Choice chuck roast $8.104/lb
Ground chuck $5.744
All uncooked ground beef $5.96
All uncooked beef roasts $7.995
Round roast $7.49
Round steak $8.485
 
Eggs $5.897/dozen
Frozen orange juice $4.492/12oz
Coffee $7.246
White Sugar $1.011
 
Table wine $14.087/liter
Beer $1.819/pint
 
 

Thursday, October 5, 2023

Average protein prices per pound August 2023 vs. 2019 annual average

Ground Beef: $5.076 / $3.807, up 33.3%

Pork Chops: $4.359 / $3.339, up 30.5%

Bacon: $6.502 / $5.613, up 15.8%

Chicken: $1.958 / $1.495, up 30.97%

Dozen eggs: $2.043 / $1.396, up 46.3%

Dried beans: $1.702 / $1.344, up 26.6%

Gallon milk: $3.927 / $3.036, up 29.3%

Cheddar cheese: $5.897 / $5.308, up 11.1%

Cup of yogurt: $1.576 / $1.115, up 41.3%


Wednesday, September 13, 2023

The inflation adjusted average price of ground beef in the United States

 In January 1984, ground beef was $1.29/pound.

Adjusted for inflation to August 2023, it should be $3.89/pound, according to the inflation calculator at bls.gov.

Ground beef is actually $5.08/pound, 30.5% higher.

 


Sunday, June 18, 2023

On the Sunday grill: My May 1984 33-cent hamburger should cost 96-cents in May 2023, instead it costs $1.24

 It's nearly 30% overpriced.

The inflation-adjusted pound of ground beef over the period should cost $3.82.

I buy the good stuff, however. My burger costs $1.50, washed down with a cheap pint of Hamm's Beer for 83-cents.

I'll be back to beans and rice on Monday.

A man's gotta do what a man's gotta do.