McDonald’s has some beef with today’s largest meat packers.

The fast food giant is suing the U.S. meat industry’s “Big Four” — Tyson, JBS, Cargill and National Beef Packing Company — and their subsidiaries, alleging a price fixing scheme for beef specifically. In a federal complaint, filed Friday in New York, McDonald’s accused the companies of anticompetitive measures such as collectively limiting supply to boost prices and charge “illegally inflated” amounts.

This collusion caused the beef market to become “a monopoly in which direct purchasers were forced to buy at prices dictated by (the meat packers),” McDonald’s suit reads — later noting that the injury it has sustained as one of those buyers is what “antitrust laws were designed to prevent.”

McDonald’s alleges that the meat packers’ conspiracy dates back nearly a decade, at least as early as January 2015, and continues today. Its suit argues these companies’ actions violate the Sherman Act, a federal antitrust law.

  • @TheFriar@lemm.ee
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    822 months ago

    “Company sues for what company does to customers because those profits are theirs

    • 👍Maximum Derek👍
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      442 months ago

      “I was talking to my colluding friends and they said you were doing a collusion on us. What the hell? We’re not the poors.”

    • @Maeve@midwest.social
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      182 months ago

      The worst part is, the average citizen anywhere in the world can not afford to do this. Only some other evil megacorporations