Why Your Food is SO Expensive Now
الملخص
TLDRThe video explores the significant rise in grocery prices, attributing it to supply chain shocks, climate issues, and corporate profit manipulation. It traces the journey of food from production to grocery stores, highlighting the complexities of the food supply chain and the role of corporations in driving prices up. Historical context shows a decrease in food spending as a percentage of income over time, but recent trends indicate a reversal due to various crises. The video calls for government intervention to ensure affordable food for consumers, citing successful programs in other countries.
الوجبات الجاهزة
- 📈 Grocery prices have surged by 13% annually.
- 💰 Corporations are making record profits amid rising prices.
- 🌍 The food supply chain is complex and global.
- 📉 Historical spending on food has decreased over time.
- ⚖️ Corporate consolidation reduces market competition.
- 🌱 Climate change impacts food production and prices.
- 🚨 Supply chain shocks contribute to price increases.
- 📊 Companies can raise prices without losing demand.
- 🛒 Government intervention can help regulate food prices.
- 🥚 Egg prices soared due to bird flu, benefiting producers.
الجدول الزمني
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
The video discusses the rising grocery prices, highlighting a significant increase from the usual 1-2% to around 13% annually. It attributes this to various factors, including COVID-19 and inflation, but suggests that corporate profits and the food system's structure play a larger role. The narrator aims to explore the complexities of the food system and the corporations behind it, seeking to understand their influence on rising prices.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
The historical context of food trade is presented, tracing back to ancient civilizations that began growing surplus food and trading it. This trade evolved into a global system, leading to technological advancements and the establishment of a global economy post-World War II. The narrator emphasizes how this interconnectedness has transformed trade, making it more efficient but also fragile, as seen in the current food pricing crisis.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
The video contrasts local and global food supply chains, using tomatoes as an example. It details the journey of tomatoes from Mexico to the U.S., highlighting the logistical challenges and costs involved. The narrator points out that despite the complex journey, imported tomatoes can be cheaper than locally sourced ones, raising questions about the food system's pricing mechanisms and the role of supply chains in food costs.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
The narrator introduces the concept of supply chain shocks, explaining how disruptions at any point in the food supply chain can lead to increased prices for consumers. Various recent events, including climate issues and geopolitical conflicts, are cited as contributing factors to these shocks, which have made food prices more volatile and unpredictable.
- 00:20:00 - 00:26:56
The video concludes by addressing the role of corporate profits in rising food prices, suggesting that companies have taken advantage of crises to raise prices beyond necessary levels. It calls for a reevaluation of the food system, advocating for government intervention to ensure fair pricing and protect consumers from corporate manipulation.
الخريطة الذهنية
فيديو أسئلة وأجوبة
What are the main reasons for rising grocery prices?
Rising grocery prices are attributed to supply chain shocks, climate-related issues, and corporate profit manipulation.
How has the food supply chain evolved over time?
The food supply chain has evolved from local trade to a complex global system involving multiple steps and players.
What role do corporations play in food pricing?
Corporations often raise prices beyond necessary costs, leading to increased profits while consumers face higher prices.
What historical changes have affected food spending?
Historically, food spending as a percentage of income has decreased significantly since the early 1900s.
How can government intervention help with food prices?
Government intervention can help regulate prices and ensure affordable food for consumers, as seen in Mexico's basic basket program.
What is the impact of climate change on food prices?
Climate change has led to droughts and other issues that disrupt food production, contributing to higher prices.
What is the significance of corporate consolidation in the food industry?
Corporate consolidation reduces competition, allowing companies to manipulate prices and increase profits.
How did COVID-19 affect the food supply chain?
COVID-19 caused significant disruptions in the food supply chain, leading to shortages and increased prices.
What is the relationship between consumer demand and price increases?
Companies have found they can raise prices without significantly reducing consumer demand, leading to higher profits.
What are some examples of price manipulation in the food industry?
Examples include egg producers raising prices during bird flu outbreaks while increasing profits.
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- 00:00:00(paper thuds)
- 00:00:01- Eggs, milk, bread, ground beef, butter.
- 00:00:04Prices at the grocery store are going up.
- 00:00:06Especially for people who spend
- 00:00:08a large amount of their income on food.
- 00:00:10So a little price shock can have huge effects.
- 00:00:12Grocery prices that usually go up 1% or 2% a year
- 00:00:16have started jumping to more like 13% a year.
- 00:00:18- Prices are going up yet again.
- 00:00:20- [News Reporter] Sticker shock on store shelves.
- 00:00:22- You probably don't need to be reminded.
- 00:00:24- Now, of course, everyone's blaming COVID
- 00:00:26and broader inflation,
- 00:00:27and while those are a part of the explanation,
- 00:00:30there's actually something bigger going on here.
- 00:00:32I mean, check this out.
- 00:00:33Food companies are bringing in record profits.
- 00:00:35CEOs of those companies are making way more
- 00:00:37just in the last few years,
- 00:00:38and shareholders are getting huge payouts.
- 00:00:40So what is going on here?
- 00:00:43That is a question I have had for a long time,
- 00:00:45and we're sitting here in the kitchen,
- 00:00:46which is also our studio,
- 00:00:48and I thought, you know, gotta use it sometime.
- 00:00:51So why not on the video about food?
- 00:00:53Today, we're gonna understand our food system,
- 00:00:54the vast, complicated, kind of magical food system
- 00:00:57that provides a lot of us with our nourishment,
- 00:01:00bringing food from all around the world
- 00:01:01to our grocery store shelves.
- 00:01:03And then we're gonna look at the corporations
- 00:01:04behind this system.
- 00:01:06I wanna understand what their incentives are,
- 00:01:07what their power is,
- 00:01:09and what they have to do, if anything,
- 00:01:10with the rising prices.
- 00:01:12I also wanna understand
- 00:01:13why they're making so much money right now.
- 00:01:14And ultimately, I want to answer what and who is behind
- 00:01:18this massive increase in grocery store prices.
- 00:01:21(bell tolls)
- 00:01:22About 8,000 years ago in what today is Syria and Iraq,
- 00:01:27you could find humans doing something
- 00:01:29that was pretty unique for the time: they're growing food,
- 00:01:32and, in fact, more food than they actually needed,
- 00:01:34and then started trading it
- 00:01:36with other people who had more than they needed.
- 00:01:38Now, this was new.
- 00:01:39If there was one group who lived near a salt mine
- 00:01:41and another group who grew wheat,
- 00:01:43they would both make a surplus, they would swap their goods,
- 00:01:45and both would be better off.
- 00:01:46A super basic idea that changed everything.
- 00:01:49Humans started doing this at a more and more massive scale,
- 00:01:52crossing seas and deserts, building empires to move goods,
- 00:01:56to share tools, to spread ideas.
- 00:01:58And the collective human focus became:
- 00:02:00how do we do this better, bigger?
- 00:02:02We invented technology to improve it.
- 00:02:04We fought wars over it.
- 00:02:05We created money and companies and laws,
- 00:02:08entire systems just to trade more stuff with more people.
- 00:02:11Trade was changing the world,
- 00:02:13and a lot of the history of our world
- 00:02:14is the history of trade.
- 00:02:16It's what spread ideas and technology
- 00:02:19and flavors around the globe.
- 00:02:20Arabic math and Chinese inventions,
- 00:02:23tomatoes arriving to Italy,
- 00:02:24chilies arriving to Asia, corn to Africa.
- 00:02:27Coffee arrives to Europe in, like, the 1500s
- 00:02:30and blows everyone's minds,
- 00:02:32contributes to a whole revolution in thinking.
- 00:02:36(supping) That's good coffee, guys.
- 00:02:39But despite all of this global trade
- 00:02:41and improvement in connecting the world
- 00:02:43and bringing flavors everywhere,
- 00:02:45food still remained quite expensive.
- 00:02:47You still had to work really hard
- 00:02:49just to feed yourself and your family.
- 00:02:50Agriculture and food preparation
- 00:02:52required immense physical labor, involving entire households
- 00:02:55in the effort to produce sufficient calories to survive.
- 00:02:58Like, we have data from the late 1700s
- 00:03:01that shows that people in Britain spent
- 00:03:0375% of their income just feeding themselves.
- 00:03:06Around the same time in France,
- 00:03:07they were spending about 70% of their income on bread alone.
- 00:03:12(bread tearing)
- 00:03:14Oh, my God. (munching)
- 00:03:15Is there anything better than just white bread?
- 00:03:17Okay, but soon that started changing, and fast.
- 00:03:20(tray clatters) Let's graph it.
- 00:03:21(paper rustling)
- 00:03:22Look what happens by the year 1900:
- 00:03:24a household is spending more like
- 00:03:2542% of their income on food.
- 00:03:27Then in the '30s, it goes down to 34%.
- 00:03:29Just keeps falling.
- 00:03:30After World War II,
- 00:03:31something really dramatic changes in the global economy.
- 00:03:35(lively jazz music)
- 00:03:37The US and its allies built a global economic system
- 00:03:40meant to connect the globe.
- 00:03:41Maybe if everyone's economy was connected,
- 00:03:43it would all be benefiting too much to fight each other,
- 00:03:46was kind of the thinking.
- 00:03:47And America wanted to set the rules for everyone,
- 00:03:49and they successfully did.
- 00:03:51And with this new system comes a whole new level
- 00:03:54of efficiency and connection.
- 00:03:55Like these magical boxes
- 00:03:56that can go seamlessly from ships to trains to trucks,
- 00:04:00drastically cutting costs and loading time.
- 00:04:03The world standardized around everything,
- 00:04:05from railroad sizes, pallet sizes, paper sizes, barcodes,
- 00:04:08shoe sizes, screw sizes.
- 00:04:10It's invisible stuff.
- 00:04:11This isn't sexy, but it's important.
- 00:04:13It's transformative.
- 00:04:14The whole idea being that
- 00:04:15if everyone's using the same system,
- 00:04:16everything everywhere becomes more efficient.
- 00:04:19Trade gets better.
- 00:04:20Now, a tractor part made in South Korea
- 00:04:22snaps in nicely to a tractor in Kansas.
- 00:04:24And then there was the US dollar
- 00:04:26that everyone could use as the global currency,
- 00:04:28along with international agreements
- 00:04:29that laid the rules for modern trade.
- 00:04:32Suddenly, it's like the 1950s,
- 00:04:33and the whole world is being stitched together
- 00:04:35in ways our ancient grain-trading ancestors
- 00:04:38could have never imagined.
- 00:04:40And this is why today, almost everything you touch
- 00:04:43has gone to more countries than you have,
- 00:04:45because it traverses a huge network of the global economy.
- 00:04:49We call it the supply chain.
- 00:04:50(bright choral music)
- 00:04:52Like, look at an iPhone, albeit kind of cracked.
- 00:04:55This iPhone traveled to 43 countries
- 00:04:58before it ended up in my hands.
- 00:04:59Okay, but food isn't an iPhone.
- 00:05:01Food is squishy and perishable
- 00:05:03and needs to kind of be refrigerated.
- 00:05:06It doesn't go through the same, like,
- 00:05:07advanced global supply chain that other stuff does, right?
- 00:05:10Wrong, actually.
- 00:05:12(peppy upbeat music)
- 00:05:13This is a beautiful tomato
- 00:05:16that was grown here in my local area,
- 00:05:18that I bought at a farmer's market.
- 00:05:20Full disclosure: did not buy this.
- 00:05:22My producer bought it, and I'm holding it now,
- 00:05:24and I will probably eat it with this bread
- 00:05:26and this coffee after I'm done shooting this video.
- 00:05:28Anyway, this costs six bucks, okay?
- 00:05:30This is a $6 tomato.
- 00:05:31Take it in.
- 00:05:33That beautiful tomato, wow.
- 00:05:34Shoots really nicely.
- 00:05:35Five miles from my house, okay?
- 00:05:37Then we've got these tomatoes.
- 00:05:39They don't look that much different, a little more uniform.
- 00:05:41These are tomatoes that came from the global economy.
- 00:05:44They're all basically the exact same size.
- 00:05:46These have come to me from very far away,
- 00:05:48not in this country.
- 00:05:49We actually do grow a lot of tomatoes
- 00:05:51here in the United States, over in California,
- 00:05:52but most of our tomatoes are grown in Mexico.
- 00:05:55Four billion pounds a year come into the US.
- 00:05:57So here we are in northern Mexico,
- 00:05:59here in these endless fertile fields.
- 00:06:01I've actually spent a lot of time in this region,
- 00:06:04not as a journalist but as a Mormon missionary,
- 00:06:06riding in pickup trucks through fields
- 00:06:08that grow food destined for US grocery stores.
- 00:06:12(John speaking in foreign language)
- 00:06:13Ah!
- 00:06:15Anyway, let's not look at my bad Spanish.
- 00:06:16Let's talk about the journey of a tomato.
- 00:06:18They're often picked while they're still green;
- 00:06:20they're not ripe yet.
- 00:06:21Often picked by hand and then loaded into trucks.
- 00:06:24A tomato like this will often go into a sealed room
- 00:06:26where they are gassed with ethylene to ripen them.
- 00:06:29Ethylene is just a naturally occurring hormone
- 00:06:31that helps ripen these guys,
- 00:06:33and they want them to all ripen at the same time,
- 00:06:35right as they get to the grocery store.
- 00:06:36But we have a long way to go
- 00:06:37before we get to the grocery store.
- 00:06:38So they're pumped with this gas.
- 00:06:39And then, if they're going into cans,
- 00:06:41which a lot of tomatoes do,
- 00:06:42they go through this industrial factory wizardry.
- 00:06:45But for the ones that are gonna end up like this, fresh,
- 00:06:48they are on a truck headed north.
- 00:06:51They end up in a nearby city,
- 00:06:52probably the capital, Culiacan,
- 00:06:54in this big facility where they're sorted, chilled,
- 00:06:57and then put on big pallets.
- 00:06:58They get back onto a truck,
- 00:07:00which, by the way, all of these trucks are refrigerated.
- 00:07:02That's a big logistical challenge,
- 00:07:04to make sure these things don't get too hot or cold.
- 00:07:06And now the truck is heading north.
- 00:07:07It gets to the US-Mexico border.
- 00:07:09Look, this is where people go back and forth
- 00:07:11between the two countries,
- 00:07:12but over here is a special border crossing just for trucks.
- 00:07:15Our tomatoes are in one of these.
- 00:07:16It clears customs, and then it probably ends up
- 00:07:18at one of these transfer stations,
- 00:07:20where the trailer might be transferred onto another truck
- 00:07:22to an American driver who will take it from there.
- 00:07:25The tomatoes are now in the United States.
- 00:07:26Once in the US, they might be re-ripened and repackaged,
- 00:07:30and they eventually take a long-haul trip
- 00:07:31on America's freeways, ending up at a distribution center
- 00:07:35like this one in Illinois.
- 00:07:37Here, tucked into the endless expanse of farmland,
- 00:07:39is this massive building surrounded by cargo trucks.
- 00:07:42The tomatoes are unloaded, they're scanned for inventory,
- 00:07:45they're repackaged, and then they're back on the road,
- 00:07:47headed towards the grocery store.
- 00:07:49And I promise I'm getting close here.
- 00:07:50Okay, we've arrived at the grocery store.
- 00:07:52This whole journey was nine days,
- 00:07:53about 1,000 kilometers, or 620 miles,
- 00:07:56and the tomatoes are finally stacked in the vegetable aisle,
- 00:07:59ready for you to buy a pound for $2,
- 00:08:01bring them home, chop 'em up, and throw them into a sauce.
- 00:08:04Bon appetit.
- 00:08:06That was crazy, right?
- 00:08:07Like, that whole journey, like, your tomatoes
- 00:08:09came all the way from a farm in Mexico,
- 00:08:11and they somehow made it to the grocery store
- 00:08:13without being smashed or, like, going bad,
- 00:08:15and are somehow significantly cheaper than this?
- 00:08:19How does that work?
- 00:08:20Like, how does that make any sense?
- 00:08:21And it's not just tomatoes.
- 00:08:23(light groovy music)
- 00:08:26Avocados are picked by hand in southern Mexico,
- 00:08:29sorted, chilled, trucked,
- 00:08:30and displayed in the Northeast of the United States
- 00:08:33in the dead of winter for, like, three bucks.
- 00:08:36Most of our vegetables in the United States
- 00:08:38come from other countries, like 60%.
- 00:08:40And of course, you can imagine that it gets more complicated
- 00:08:43with animal products: eggs, milk, meat.
- 00:08:46But this is your food system.
- 00:08:47Our food system.
- 00:08:48The majority of us participate in this food system.
- 00:08:51Wait, pause.
- 00:08:52I'm about to get into the part
- 00:08:54where I say why the food is more expensive,
- 00:08:55and these journeys are really important.
- 00:08:57But I wouldn't be able to make these videos
- 00:09:00without sponsors.
- 00:09:01And so I need to take a moment to thank today's sponsor,
- 00:09:03who is Incogni.
- 00:09:04I'm a big fan of Incogni because it has changed my world
- 00:09:08as it pertains to junk mail and robocalls
- 00:09:10and annoying texts, and privacy.
- 00:09:12Turns out that in the same way
- 00:09:14that there's a big invisible market for tomato shipping,
- 00:09:17there's also an invisible market for your data, your name,
- 00:09:21your birthday, what you do online,
- 00:09:23what you buy, where you live.
- 00:09:26This is valuable stuff,
- 00:09:27and it is quietly traded in the background
- 00:09:30without you really knowing about it.
- 00:09:31You've agreed to it by clicking these boxes.
- 00:09:34And now, legally, these data brokers have your information,
- 00:09:38and they can sell it as a commodity.
- 00:09:40Insurance companies, people search sites, marketers.
- 00:09:43But in the same way that they legally can do this,
- 00:09:45you legally can ask them to not do it.
- 00:09:47But it's hard and cumbersome and annoying,
- 00:09:49which is where Incogni comes in.
- 00:09:50Here's how it worked for me.
- 00:09:51I signed up for Incogni.
- 00:09:52I gave them permission to go request
- 00:09:54that I be taken off these lists.
- 00:09:56Incogni does this in the background.
- 00:09:58Month after month, I get added to a list.
- 00:10:00Incogni goes and asks that company to take me off the list.
- 00:10:03And what I get to do
- 00:10:04is just watch it all happen in the background.
- 00:10:07Check this out: sign into my Incogni account,
- 00:10:09and boom, I get this.
- 00:10:11This is a dashboard that is the status
- 00:10:13of all of these requests that Incogni has done for me.
- 00:10:15How many they've sent out, how many are still in progress,
- 00:10:18and how many they've completed.
- 00:10:20How many lists I've been taken off of.
- 00:10:22685.
- 00:10:24They even give me this fancy graph.
- 00:10:26This is my privacy being reclaimed.
- 00:10:27They now have this thing called custom removals
- 00:10:30where you can just go on,
- 00:10:31and if there's a website that you think your data is on,
- 00:10:34like if you find yourself
- 00:10:35on a people search site or whatever,
- 00:10:36you can send that to Incogni,
- 00:10:38and they will go out on your behalf
- 00:10:40to request that you be taken off.
- 00:10:41I mean, it's just great.
- 00:10:42So if you want to get 60% off an Incogni plan,
- 00:10:46you can use my link, which is Incogni.com/JohnnyHarris.
- 00:10:49You get 60% off if you do the annual plan.
- 00:10:51I've been doing the annual plan for two years now,
- 00:10:53which is why I have 685 completed requests,
- 00:10:57because Incogni kind of monitors constantly.
- 00:11:00As you get added to lists,
- 00:11:01they continue to request that you be taken off lists.
- 00:11:04So, way to reclaim your privacy if you're into that stuff.
- 00:11:06If you don't like your data being bought and sold
- 00:11:07without your explicit knowledge or permission,
- 00:11:10Incogni might be a good fit for you.
- 00:11:12I'm also just grateful that Incogni comes back
- 00:11:14to sponsor our videos and support our journalism.
- 00:11:17We wouldn't be able to make these videos without them.
- 00:11:18Okay, let's dive back into this supply chain,
- 00:11:20the tomato journey,
- 00:11:21and the answer to this very important question.
- 00:11:24(groovy smooth jazz music)
- 00:11:28So why is food suddenly way more expensive?
- 00:11:31Well, there are two answers to that question
- 00:11:33that we are about to get to.
- 00:11:34The first one will make a lot of intuitive sense
- 00:11:36because we just traced the journey of a tomato.
- 00:11:39The second one will boil your blood.
- 00:11:41Answer number one: something happens along the way.
- 00:11:45Like, let's go back to this map.
- 00:11:46And you see that in this journey,
- 00:11:48your tomatoes passed through farmers and packagers
- 00:11:51and cold storage and drivers and customs brokers,
- 00:11:54international trade treaties, warehouses,
- 00:11:56wholesalers, grocery stores.
- 00:11:58If any part of this system breaks or becomes more expensive,
- 00:12:04or if there's a power outage or a storm or a frost
- 00:12:07or a drought or gas prices spike, workers go on strike,
- 00:12:11there's a new tariff,
- 00:12:11that can make any one of these steps more expensive.
- 00:12:14And it is you, the final customer, who will pay that price.
- 00:12:17We call this a supply chain shock or shortage.
- 00:12:20And it's kind of ironic that the system
- 00:12:22that makes food more accessible and cheaper
- 00:12:25is also the same system that makes our prices fragile.
- 00:12:28So yeah, that's answer number one: supply chain shocks.
- 00:12:31And over the last four years,
- 00:12:32I mean, you know, there's kind of been a lot.
- 00:12:34(lively percussive music)
- 00:12:36There's obviously COVID,
- 00:12:37but that was just the beginning of a domino effect.
- 00:12:40There was a drought in the Mediterranean,
- 00:12:41so olive oil prices went up.
- 00:12:42- Climate-related issues
- 00:12:43have screwed up fresh produce.
- 00:12:45Writ large, there are both climate stuff
- 00:12:47that affects how much we can grow,
- 00:12:49but also sometimes climate
- 00:12:51then interacts with, like, disease outbreaks.
- 00:12:53- A freeze in Texas wiped out a bunch of citrus.
- 00:12:55- [News Reporter] These farmers are experiencing
- 00:12:57some of the worst conditions ever.
- 00:12:59Because of the drought,
- 00:13:00the ground is just not fit for grazing.
- 00:13:01And like many others,
- 00:13:02the rancher here has had to cull his herd
- 00:13:04because it's more economical than feeding them.
- 00:13:06- Russia's invasion of Ukraine
- 00:13:07messed with a lot of industries.
- 00:13:09- The war in Ukraine spiked wheat prices there
- 00:13:11for a little bit and also spiked fertilizer prices.
- 00:13:14And the issue is, Russia controls
- 00:13:16one type of fertilizer but not two others.
- 00:13:18And so it meant farmers had to, like, retool
- 00:13:21all of their systems to switch to the other fertilizer.
- 00:13:23And then there was a run on those two fertilizers.
- 00:13:26Oh, palm oil got really screwed up there for a while
- 00:13:29because Indonesia decided to temporarily ban exports
- 00:13:32because prices were increasing so much,
- 00:13:34so they wanted to make sure they had enough supply.
- 00:13:35This was also kind of in the wake of Ukraine.
- 00:13:37And so vegetable oil prices were up.
- 00:13:40- A hurricane in Florida messes with orange groves.
- 00:13:42The Houthi rebels in Yemen are firing rockets
- 00:13:45at these merchant ships
- 00:13:46that are the lifeblood of the global economy.
- 00:13:48- Canada, the largest producer of canola oil,
- 00:13:51had a big drought, and so that dropped.
- 00:13:52Meat processing during the pandemic,
- 00:13:54there were massive COVID outbreaks in meatpacking,
- 00:13:57and so they had slowed down a lot of line speeds
- 00:14:00because there were fewer workers.
- 00:14:02And so just, like, less meat was getting slaughtered
- 00:14:04and packaged.
- 00:14:05- And then, of course, there were shortages
- 00:14:07in random things like packaging and trucking
- 00:14:09and cold storage and shipping containers.
- 00:14:12- During COVID, production of aluminum cans was lower
- 00:14:14because factories were closed.
- 00:14:16But then trade wars over aluminum have affected cans,
- 00:14:19and so for a while, soda was being affected,
- 00:14:21and beer was being affected.
- 00:14:22Each shock to the system triggers a reverberation
- 00:14:26through the rest of the system,
- 00:14:28which makes things more expensive and unpredictable.
- 00:14:31The price goes up,
- 00:14:31and eventually, the price of your final product,
- 00:14:34the thing you see on the grocery aisle, has gone up.
- 00:14:37Okay, so no one's disputing that supply chain shocks
- 00:14:40are a major reason why prices have gone up,
- 00:14:43but this isn't actually the full explanation.
- 00:14:45There's something bigger going on here.
- 00:14:47And that gets to my second answer to the question
- 00:14:49of why grocery prices are more expensive.
- 00:14:51I'll just say it upfront here,
- 00:14:53which is, we've all been kind of tricked.
- 00:14:55And there are people making a lot of money
- 00:14:57off of us being tricked about prices.
- 00:15:00- Basically, in COVID,
- 00:15:01I think there was kind of a reckoning.
- 00:15:03Customers were pretty understanding when companies said,
- 00:15:07"Hey, you're going through hard times, and so are we.
- 00:15:09Like, our costs are going up."
- 00:15:10There was kind of this reset.
- 00:15:11The American consumer has gotten so used to
- 00:15:14having a really cheap thing delivered to their door
- 00:15:17in, like, two hours, right?
- 00:15:19Like in econ 101, they teach you about a supply
- 00:15:21and a demand curve, right?
- 00:15:22And as you increase prices,
- 00:15:24the number of units you sell goes down.
- 00:15:26And what you're trying to do
- 00:15:27is, like, maximize those two things
- 00:15:29of, like, I can sell as many products as I can make
- 00:15:32for as much as this.
- 00:15:33And, like, that's, you know, the price.
- 00:15:34- The invisible hand. Yeah.
- 00:15:35- Right? (laughs) Yes.
- 00:15:36And so if you increase prices,
- 00:15:39you expect, intuitively, to sell a little bit less.
- 00:15:42Now, you can, like, jigger it enough
- 00:15:44that, like, the total is a little bit higher.
- 00:15:46But what companies realized is they could inch prices up
- 00:15:49and see no, or very little, reduction in consumer demand.
- 00:15:53And so they kept doing it.
- 00:15:54- This will be clear very soon
- 00:15:55because there's a lot of examples of this,
- 00:15:57but the best one that is on my mind is eggs.
- 00:16:00- The egg prices, out of control.
- 00:16:03- Eggs are insanely expensive right now.
- 00:16:05Maybe by the time you're watching this,
- 00:16:06they will have gone down a little bit.
- 00:16:08But over the last, like, three or four years,
- 00:16:09egg prices have gone crazy.
- 00:16:11And what's the explanation that we're all hearing?
- 00:16:13Yes, the bird flu, culling millions of hens.
- 00:16:17- Bird flu. - Bird flu.
- 00:16:18- Bird flu. - Already,
- 00:16:19more than 90 million birds have been killed
- 00:16:21since the outbreak started.
- 00:16:23- I mean, if you are an egg producer
- 00:16:25and suddenly there is an outbreak of bird flu
- 00:16:28in all of your farms, like, that's a huge deal.
- 00:16:31That would be, like, really terrible, right?
- 00:16:33For your business.
- 00:16:34You're like, "Man, our product is being killed by a flu."
- 00:16:37And, wait a minute.
- 00:16:38"US's biggest egg producer's
- 00:16:41profits triple as prices soar."
- 00:16:45Wait, triple profits for the biggest egg producer?
- 00:16:49Oh, and if you look at the biggest egg producer's
- 00:16:53stock price, you see this:
- 00:16:55right around the time when the avian flu is happening,
- 00:16:57their stock price is going nuts.
- 00:16:59Time to get out their annual report.
- 00:17:00(paper rustling)
- 00:17:02Annual report for Cal-Maine Foods Inc.
- 00:17:05They're a publicly traded company.
- 00:17:07They must disclose all of their financials,
- 00:17:09which means we can give a little more insight
- 00:17:10as to how they fared during this time,
- 00:17:13when there is a crisis in our egg economy.
- 00:17:18And all of us are paying, like,
- 00:17:19more than double the price for a dozen eggs.
- 00:17:22This is 2023,
- 00:17:24and it looks like its shareholders
- 00:17:26got paid $250 million in profits.
- 00:17:30Okay?
- 00:17:31It's right in the middle of the bird flu crisis.
- 00:17:33You wouldn't think that they would be profiting that much.
- 00:17:35But is that a lot?
- 00:17:36$250 million?
- 00:17:37Maybe that's not that much.
- 00:17:38Let's graph the dividends,
- 00:17:40the profits paid out to shareholders.
- 00:17:42(paper rustling) (sparse percussive music)
- 00:17:44Whoa! Okay.
- 00:17:45Well, 2023 was a great year
- 00:17:49for the largest egg producer in the United States,
- 00:17:51despite, like, all of this avian flu.
- 00:17:55So in 2023, they paid $250 million.
- 00:17:57The year before, they paid $6 million.
- 00:18:00So they had a 40-times increase in the profits they paid out
- 00:18:03to their shareholders, right in the heart of when all of us
- 00:18:06were going to restaurants and seeing these signs:
- 00:18:08"We're raising prices on eggs because there's a bird flu,
- 00:18:10so we have to pay more."
- 00:18:11But the company making the eggs
- 00:18:12is profiting a lot more money?
- 00:18:14But it's not just revenue.
- 00:18:15It's not like they're making more money
- 00:18:17and their costs have increased a bunch, so they're not...
- 00:18:19They're profiting.
- 00:18:20They're making way more money after all of their costs,
- 00:18:23and we are all paying more.
- 00:18:25Oh, and this year, 2025,
- 00:18:26their profits are up 342% in Q2 of this year.
- 00:18:31I mean, just to mic drop, like, drive this home.
- 00:18:34Let's put these two graphs next to each other.
- 00:18:36This one is the price for a dozen eggs.
- 00:18:39It's gone up a ton because of bird flu.
- 00:18:40And this one is profits for shareholder of Cal-Maine Foods
- 00:18:43going up at the same time.
- 00:18:45So these graphs tell a story of a company
- 00:18:47who was able to raise prices
- 00:18:48more than what they needed to cover their costs,
- 00:18:50and they were somehow able to do that.
- 00:18:51Can we just look at the supply of eggs in the United States?
- 00:18:56Just real quick.
- 00:18:58This graph, there's the price.
- 00:18:59Price goes up here, right?
- 00:19:00Now let's draw on the number of eggs produced
- 00:19:03in the United States during this time.
- 00:19:05Here's the outbreak of the avian flu, early 2023.
- 00:19:08Now I'm going to draw on the number of eggs
- 00:19:11produced in the United States.
- 00:19:13If I were guessing, I hadn't seen this chart before;
- 00:19:15I would imagine it would look something like this:
- 00:19:16like, eggs, eggs, eggs.
- 00:19:17Flu happens, production of eggs plummets.
- 00:19:20When there's less supply, prices have to go up.
- 00:19:23And that's why prices went up.
- 00:19:24Now let's draw on the real shape.
- 00:19:25Again: number of eggs produced in the United States.
- 00:19:27Boom, kind of barely dips.
- 00:19:29Yes, avian flu was a real thing.
- 00:19:31I'm not, like, drawing some, like, conspiracy theory here
- 00:19:32that, like, this is not real.
- 00:19:34But, like, this crisis was as much about storytelling
- 00:19:37as it was about supply and demand.
- 00:19:39We all accepted way higher prices because of these signs,
- 00:19:44because of all of this news.
- 00:19:45And in fact, thanks to COVID,
- 00:19:47we were kind of used to hearing about supply chains
- 00:19:49and paying higher prices and waiting longer
- 00:19:51because of something that's out of our control.
- 00:19:54This is the driver of inflation, right?
- 00:19:56But what this story tells is that there's a company
- 00:19:59that, by the way, controls 25% of the market.
- 00:20:02They're a huge player,
- 00:20:03the largest player by far in the egg economy,
- 00:20:05that has the ability to raise prices
- 00:20:08even when they don't need to increase costs.
- 00:20:10And that company, by the way,
- 00:20:12if you chart how many eggs they were making,
- 00:20:14during the crisis, they were actually making more eggs
- 00:20:17and just selling them at a way higher price.
- 00:20:19So, of course, their profits tripled.
- 00:20:21Of course, their shareholders made off with huge dividends.
- 00:20:24You can read a lot more about this
- 00:20:26in a couple really good reports
- 00:20:27that were very helpful for our reporting,
- 00:20:29one of which concludes
- 00:20:31that corporations have used this outbreak, the avian flu,
- 00:20:34as a smoke screen for raising prices
- 00:20:37beyond what was necessary to cover any rising costs.
- 00:20:40This is the kind of stuff that happens
- 00:20:42when one company owns a huge portion of an industry.
- 00:20:46They just have a ton of control,
- 00:20:48and they're able to manipulate the market.
- 00:20:50That is supposed to be a competitive space
- 00:20:52where all the firms compete for customers
- 00:20:54by lowering their prices as much as they possibly can.
- 00:20:56But our modern food system
- 00:20:58has become more and more consolidated.
- 00:21:00Four firms handle 85% of all beef processing in the US.
- 00:21:04Three companies control 78% of all pasta.
- 00:21:07Two firms own 70% of the canned tuna industry.
- 00:21:10One company dominates seed genetics.
- 00:21:1370% of all grocery stores flow through just four chains.
- 00:21:17This level of consolidation
- 00:21:19means that companies don't compete on prices;
- 00:21:22they match prices.
- 00:21:23And when there is a crisis,
- 00:21:25they're able to take advantage of that
- 00:21:27to help spread the narrative and signal to the rest of us
- 00:21:30that prices have gone up because of this crisis.
- 00:21:31And really, they're just padding their bottom line.
- 00:21:33There's a bunch of lawsuits happening right now
- 00:21:35because of this.
- 00:21:35McDonald's is suing meat companies
- 00:21:37for colluding to keep prices high.
- 00:21:39Frozen potatoes for your French fries,
- 00:21:42also very consolidated.
- 00:21:43Also some, like, price manipulation allegations there.
- 00:21:46A big turkey producer
- 00:21:47is in the middle of a price-fixing scandal.
- 00:21:49They've had to pay out settlements:
- 00:21:51$32 million here, $4 million there.
- 00:21:54I mean, this is kind of a cost of doing business
- 00:21:56when you are a big industrial food producer
- 00:21:58and you use your power to cash in.
- 00:22:00So we've been told a story that these crises,
- 00:22:03COVID and supply chain shocks,
- 00:22:05are at the root of inflation, of prices going up.
- 00:22:08But there's now pretty compelling evidence
- 00:22:10that corporate profits,
- 00:22:12their ability to take advantage of these crises
- 00:22:13to raise prices above where they need to be,
- 00:22:15is a major driver of inflation.
- 00:22:17Meaning we're paying more money,
- 00:22:18and we're making these companies way richer.
- 00:22:21Corporate profits are at an all-time high,
- 00:22:24despite some volatility in the economy.
- 00:22:26Last year, margins reached over 16%,
- 00:22:28which is the highest on record since 1950.
- 00:22:31And it's not just in food; it's across all sectors.
- 00:22:34- The CFO of Hershey in 2023
- 00:22:37said on an earnings call to the company's shareholders,
- 00:22:39quote, "Pricing and productivity gains
- 00:22:42more than offset inflation
- 00:22:44and higher manufacturing and overhead costs."
- 00:22:46In non-Wall Street speak, that says,
- 00:22:49"We increased our prices
- 00:22:51well above what our increased costs were."
- 00:22:54Like, our costs for sugar or cocoa, etc., have gone up,
- 00:22:57but we have been able to not only pass
- 00:22:59all of those costs onto consumers,
- 00:23:01but then some, increasing our profit margin.
- 00:23:04Hershey wasn't the only company to say this.
- 00:23:06Virtually, like, the vast majority
- 00:23:08of S&P 500 companies said this.
- 00:23:10Frito-Lay and PepsiCo, for example, did the same thing,
- 00:23:13where they said, "We've been able to rapidly increase
- 00:23:16kind of our pricing actions", is what they call them,
- 00:23:19which just means increasing prices.
- 00:23:20- So profits are soaring while a family of four
- 00:23:23who's surviving on a thrifty food plan
- 00:23:26is seeing their costs for food increase by 30% or more
- 00:23:30over the last few years.
- 00:23:32More and more turning to government programs.
- 00:23:34And so now our taxpayer dollars
- 00:23:36are going to help inflated prices
- 00:23:39to make shareholders rich.
- 00:23:41It's not a good setup.
- 00:23:42It's not a good set of incentives.
- 00:23:44It's not a free market.
- 00:23:45This isn't good.
- 00:23:46And yet, luckily, there is some hope here.
- 00:23:48The Department of Justice is already investigating
- 00:23:50this egg price-fixing allegation.
- 00:23:53Cal-Maine has already been accused of doing this
- 00:23:56in previous disease outbreaks.
- 00:23:58- [News Reporter] Now the largest supplier of eggs in the US
- 00:24:01now under federal investigation related to sky-high prices
- 00:24:05that consumers saw for several months.
- 00:24:06- But what really needs to happen is a breaking up
- 00:24:09of these food companies
- 00:24:10that have so much power in the market.
- 00:24:12Food isn't like other things.
- 00:24:14It's not like vacations and cars
- 00:24:17and things that are discretionary; it is our basic survival.
- 00:24:19We have antitrust laws.
- 00:24:21We have other laws that protect small businesses.
- 00:24:24And this current crisis is rejuvenating a discourse
- 00:24:27around seeing what the government can do
- 00:24:29to actually make prices more affordable
- 00:24:31to everyday Americans.
- 00:24:33There's also a necessary reckoning
- 00:24:34with how reliant we are on these far-flung supply chains.
- 00:24:39COVID really started this,
- 00:24:40and you're starting to see more and more stuff
- 00:24:42come regional and local.
- 00:24:44Mexico is experimenting with the government coming in
- 00:24:47and putting a price control for a basic basket of food,
- 00:24:50using their power to negotiate with food corporations
- 00:24:53to keep prices affordable for the basics.
- 00:24:56- One place that grocery prices
- 00:24:57really didn't increase all that much was Mexico,
- 00:24:59and that's because Claudia Sheinbaum's administration
- 00:25:02did this thing called, in Spanish,
- 00:25:03it translates to "basic basket."
- 00:25:05And so for the equivalent of, like, $40,
- 00:25:08you can get enough food to feed your family,
- 00:25:10of like rice, beef, a couple of vegetables,
- 00:25:12a gallon of milk, these basics.
- 00:25:14And in fact, that price has come down
- 00:25:16by, like, 12% over the past year.
- 00:25:18And she did this.
- 00:25:18It's effectively a price control, but it's voluntary.
- 00:25:21So, in fact, Walmart of Mexico participates in this program.
- 00:25:24But she got a bunch of farmers and suppliers,
- 00:25:27and retailers to all buy into this program.
- 00:25:30She negotiated this big deal.
- 00:25:31And they all offer, like, a basic basket of goods
- 00:25:34for a low price for Mexican families.
- 00:25:37She just used, kind of, the weight of the government to say,
- 00:25:39"Hey, I think food should be cheaper for Mexicans,
- 00:25:42and how can we work together to do it?"
- 00:25:44(Claudia speaking in foreign language)
- 00:25:52- So there is some movement happening here.
- 00:25:54The reality is, our food system is amazing;
- 00:25:57it has made food much cheaper than it was,
- 00:26:00but it has some real weaknesses.
- 00:26:02Weaknesses that are being exposed in the last few years
- 00:26:05and that a lot of people are feeling
- 00:26:07when they go to the grocery store.
- 00:26:08Those are market failures.
- 00:26:10And that is where the government steps in,
- 00:26:12to ensure that our food system works for the consumers,
- 00:26:14the people who need to be able to rely on affordable food,
- 00:26:17and not for the corporations that provide it.
- 00:26:19(groovy downbeat electronic music)
- grocery prices
- food supply chain
- corporate profits
- inflation
- food industry
- consumer demand
- government intervention
- climate change
- price manipulation
- historical context