Prices are what prices are.
Inflation is the rate at which those prices are changing.
That rate has slowed to under 3%, and is lower in some sectors.
Prices that were driven by shortages in supply have come down where those supply issues have been sorted out (gasoline, eggs, for two items).
Beef hasn't come down because it takes time to rebuild the herds, and while imports may drop prices a little temporarily, they actually make it harder for livestock producers to build those herds, which will essentially amount to doing more work for less money per head. Still, it takes longer for a calf to gestate than a human, and then it has to grow to be marketable for a couple more years.
Essentially, though prices are one thing, the result of inflation. Inflation is the rate those prices change, not the change itself, and reducing inflation does not reduce prices unless the inflation rate goes negative (which is deflation, and that's generally considered bad because the value of anything bought on installments will drop below the price paid for it). If you want a reason to NOT buy stuff, that is one, just wait until it's cheaper next week, at least until the people producing it stop because they are losing money.
Peak inflation under Biden was at 8%, and now it's roughly a fourth of what it was, so inflation has dropped about 75%. The prices have not dropped because inflation is still a positive number.