Reviews and Templates for Expression We

Cut the beef — for health, for the environment and, er, for business?

Alexander Raths
Doctors say eat less beef; environmentalists say grow fewer cattle; now a business study chimes in.

We know industrially-produced meat is bad for our health and the health of the planet, but a new study suggests it’s also bad for business.

The study, What Drives Meatier Returns? conducted in partnership between Changing Tastes, an industry consulting firm, and the Analytical Consulting Lab at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, looks at the stock market performance of thirty publicly-traded restaurant companies that own well-known casual and fast food brands.

The authors pair this analysis with interviews with top industry players, data on U.S. meat consumption trends and other industry research to conclude that restaurant chains have an important business opportunity in reducing the total amount of beef they offer their customers and swapping industrially-produced beef for higher-quality beef (defined as grass-fed, hormone-free, and/or raised without antibiotics).

The study has some limitations, such as the small sample size noted by the authors, and so these findings are likely not conclusive. Nonetheless, they align with the trends we are seeing in our work here at NRDC.

By: Sasha Stashwick

Copyright remains with the original authors