As inflation hits 7%, here's a list of industries the Biden administration is targeting

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Inflation has become one of the top economic issues in the U.S., and the Biden administration is acting accordingly with various policy actions.

U.S. consumer prices rose 0.5% in December and 7.0% on a year-over-year basis, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It's the fastest rate since 1982.

Two of the biggest drivers of price spikes over 2021 have been in food and energy which is likely the reason the White House has focused on both of those sectors both for inflation as well as antitrust reasons.

Tying the two issues together is not without critics, even among Democrats. Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers posted a lengthy Twitter thread taking issue with “[a]ntitrust as an anti-inflation strategy” and has noted that Biden officials “flirt with the idea that it’s greedy meatpackers causing inflation."

President Biden gestures during a video conference with farmers, ranchers and meat processors to discuss meat and poultry supply chain issues amid relatively high inflation, at the White House campus January 3, 2022. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
President Biden gestures during a video conference with farmers, ranchers and meat processors to discuss meat and poultry supply chain issues amid relatively high inflation, at the White House campus January 3, 2022. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst · Jonathan Ernst / reuters

Oxford Economics Chief U.S. Economist Greg Daco told Yahoo Finance recently that he is expecting inflation “to peak around February” responding more to actions at the Federal Reserve than in the business community and after that, “the question is how fast inflation will cool."

But until then, it remains a front-burner issue with a recent AP-NORC poll finding the coronavirus down and inflation up when it comes to voter’s top priorities. And, in bad news for the Biden administration, another poll finds 3 in 5 voters place the blame on the president’s policies.

Here’s an ongoing tally of the industries the administration has put a spotlight on when it comes to the inflation and antitrust issues.

‘Greedy meatpackers’

The administration’s most recent target, as Summers noted, is the meat industry. Meat prices have seen one of the biggest jumps of anything you can buy in 2021 with beef prices in November up 20.9% from a year earlier.

The president's first event of 2022 was focused on the meat-processing industry and an announcement of $1 billion in new funds to smaller meat processors.

Many industries, President Biden said, feature giant companies with too much power that are “making our economy less dynamic and giving themselves free rein to raise prices, reduce options for consumers, or exploit workers.”

“The meat industry is a textbook example” of this phenomenon, he added.

During the event, the White House invited small meat producers to weigh in on how four big corporations — Cargill, Tyson Foods (TSN), JBS Foods (JBSAY), and National Beef Packing — exercise outsized control over the market.

"Today, higher prices at stores do not result in better pay to farmers" Corwin Heatwole stated in an email to Yahoo Finance. Heatwole was one of the virtual attendees at the Jan. 3 event and is the CEO of a coalition of independent farmers in Virginia. He added his belief that "increased competition and choice at stores benefits everyone in the long run: farmers and consumers."