People say you should do a business plan in one, two, five, 10. In the meat business, in the beef business, and I think for red meat in general, five years is a lifetime. It's big money. There are big investments. We're proud of what we do. If we're unable to make the regulatory system equivalent with that in the United States, and maintain that equivalency, then we'll disadvantage the packing industry in Canada and it will go south. The livestock will be processed in the United States and the meat will come back up here.
We Canadians like our beef. Consumption of beef in Canada has actually gone up over the last 10 years, but that's for ground beef. We appreciate everybody who eats beef—don't get me wrong—but we will always eat steak in this country. We'd like to be able to think we're going to produce it here. This room has a responsibility to make sure that we are equivalent, whether it be in food safety or animal welfare. We also feel that if government interferes in our marketing strategies or the consumer strategy, whatever it is, it's for the short term. We believe that a market should find itself. The minute government gets behind it and forces something somewhere, it doesn't last. We believe in markets finding themselves. For example, I talked about hormone-free beef and beef raised without antibiotics. Whoever thought that this would even be considered? But it is happening, and the market is finding itself. It's not you; it's not me. We're making it available, and the consumers are the drivers of it. That's when we know we have sustainability. There's a spirit to move things forward.
The other thing we have currently, and we congratulate everybody for the reference, in the cow-calf operation in this country, for the first time—and, Mr. Chair, you and anybody else who's in this business can attest to this—is some spirit. We have some excitement back there, and I think it's a good thing. We're not challenging those gains at all, but it's making it hard to maintain an infrastructure in the country. That's what it is.
We have record prices for lean meat. That's not new to anybody. Those prices will continue to go up, but at what point will we get resistance? That's the multi-million-dollar question.
I don't know if I answered your question, but that's a tough question. There's no black and white there. From my standpoint, I'm going to work hard to maintain a beef industry in this country, and that's why I take great privilege in being here.