jb5 said:There are literally hundreds of grades of ground beef in the US. You can buy really cheap, bad, high fat ground beef for 1.99 per pound and good, lean ground beef can easily cost 5.99 per pound (good butcher, 94% lean). Theres prime, choice, select and dog food. Within each category there are different percentages of fat you can buy.
Those of us who constantly travel between the States and AR can call BS when we see it. We spend waaaay less for good beef in AR than for good quality beef in the US. Top cuts like lomo and Porterhouse (forget the Argentine word), are less than half the price in AR.
And meat in the US is not trimmed the way it is in AR, you often pay for a lot of fat. And the service in AR is far better. Yesterday I asked a supermarket butcher to grind some pork fresh for me. He looked at me like I was crazy although he ended up doing it. At the markets in BA, the pork vendor is happy to grind the pork I buy from him along with the beef I buy from another vendor.
It's funny to me Clarin chose to write the story on meat when LOTS of things really are more expensive.
Actually it was La Nacion and not an article in Clarin. I suppose they cited beef as it is something produced locally and you would think they have a big cost advantage as wages are much lower in Argentina. Of course when people talk about Argentine beef these days it may actually be imported from someplace else as the local beef industry has been decimated in recent years.