Opinion Why eggs are cheaper than you think - "If you can’t help cringing when you see the cashier ring up eggs that cost twice as much as they did a year ago our ancestors would have taken one look at your grocery cart and declared you rich beyond their dreams."

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“Everyone in the U.S. seems obsessed with eggs right now,” my British editor told me. “It’s so bizarre.”

Indeed we are. The soaring price of eggs has given rise to internet memes and a fair amount of conspiracizing — including from a U.S. senator — about monopolistic egg producers colluding to raid the pockets of hard-working, egg-loving Americans.

The truth is that U.S. egg production is still recovering from a bout of avian flu that has devastated flocks in the United States and Europe. And while activists and senators are puzzled by how a 29 percent decline in egg production can lead to a much larger increase in the price of eggs, agricultural economist Jayson Lusk says that’s exactly what you would expect with a product for which demand is relatively insensitive to price changes. Americans do love eggs — we consume an average of 277 per person, per year — and, unfortunately, eggs don’t have a lot of close substitutes. If the price of meat rises, you can downgrade from steak to ground round, but when the price of eggs goes up, well, most people don’t want to make do with a yogurt omelet or toss a block of tofu into their cake in lieu of egg whites.

This inelasticity explains why the price of eggs has spiked so much — from $1.79 in December 2021, to $4.25 a year later — and also why we’ve noticed: We’re buying a lot of pricey eggs, and we resent it. The good news is that flocks are recovering, and the price of eggs has already begun to decline. In the meantime, it might help to contemplate that as expensive as they are, eggs are still really cheap, historically speaking.

If you look at old cookbooks, you will notice that the authors seem to view eggs and chicken as almost a luxury good. My 1950 “Betty Crocker’s Picture Cook book” contains recipes for making mock chicken dishes — out of veal. Go back further and the 1896 Fannie Farmer cookbook sternly informs readers that, “eggs, even at twenty-five cents per dozen, should not be freely used by the strict economist.” An odd assertion to the modern ear, until you realize that in 1896 a pound of round steak was about 35 percent cheaper than a pound of eggs. (Today, by contrast, a pound of eggs — about 9 eggs — would cost you roughly $3.21 at my grocery store, while a pound of round steak is $8.69.)

our incomes, to spend on something else. And that has happened even as our food consumption has shifted toward things that would have been luxuries back then. People eat berries out of season, fresh seafood even far inland … and the average person eats about six times as much chicken as they would have a century ago.

Which brings us to the relative price shift. Almost all food items have gotten much cheaper, relative to our incomes, than they were a century ago. But some food prices fell faster than others, and chicken and eggs were among those that saw the greatest improvements, thanks to a combination of agricultural innovations. Raising chickens indoors helped protect them from disease and predators. Providing them with warmer conditions and artificial light helped extend a laying season which otherwise stops in winter. Farmers developed the raised cage system which has helped increase egg production, as have breeding programs. Modern hens have gone from laying about 150 eggs per hen per year in the 1930s, to 296 today.

These advances haven’t come without cost. Modern farming techniques can raise serious concerns about animal welfare, and I make a point of buying cage free eggs which carry the label of the Humane Farm Animal Care’s “Certified Humane” program. And, of course, the antibiotics we use to keep commercially farmed animals healthy might be contributing to antibiotic resistance.

But the benefits of this revolution have also been enormous. In 1905, an average male factory worker older than 16 took home $11.16 a week, enough to buy about 41 cartons of eggs. Today, the median man earns $1,176 a week, enough to buy more than 275 cartons of eggs, even at today’s elevated prices. If you can’t help cringing when you see the cashier ring up eggs that cost twice as much as they did a year ago, it might help to remember that however poor you feel, your ancestors would have taken one look at your grocery cart and declared you rich beyond their dreams.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/02/07/egg-prices-history-relative-economics/ (Archive)
 

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"But the benefits of this revolution have also been enormous. In 1905, an average male factory worker older than 16 took home $11.16 a week, enough to buy about 41 cartons of eggs. Today, the median man earns $1,176 a week, enough to buy more than 275 cartons of eggs, even at today’s elevated prices."

What was the income tax rate for that factory worker in 1905? :story:

Oh and notice how the article is comparing an "average factory worker" to the median income today.
 
I hate shit like this, it's absolutely unproductive thinking. This is the kind of thinking that has destroyed American society. "Oh? Shit's bad? Well, back in [x time in history] shit was way worse."
Just ignoring decay that's occuring right in your face isn't actually a way to deal with it. Imagine if this is how people dealt with problems. The correct solution to laying in a puddle of piss is to get out of the puddle of piss, not thanking your lucky stars it wasn't a puddle of piss and shit.
 
"But the benefits of this revolution have also been enormous. In 1905, an average male factory worker older than 16 took home $11.16 a week, enough to buy about 41 cartons of eggs. Today, the median man earns $1,176 a week, enough to buy more than 275 cartons of eggs, even at today’s elevated prices."
What's funny is they don't say how many cartons of eggs the median man could purchase two years ago.
 
AKA Cope. At this point, people should be look into self-sufficiency because a good chunk of what the WEF is trying to do through their proxies is eliminate a person's ability to self-sustain. "Own nothing, be happy." This also means "No choice with what we give you"

Fun fact, learning how to take care of plants and animals is a matter of figuring out which works for your living. For example, button quail is something people can have in small spaces. Feed could be anything but ideally certain types of grains. Animals are adaptive.

Birds > Bugs
 
Sigh, I'm not reading that. but, will tell you this. Bought eggs today, a dozen Large for 3.65 High, but bought them anyway.
 
The article goes over how chicken and eggs were a luxury, but glosses over how it's now the cheapest option, therefore it's why it's in such demand now.

People aren't pissed that eggs cost a lot. We are pissed that the cheapest animal protein source has risen in price dumbass.
 
Ah yes the old, "Sure we know it may seem to you as though your money is worth a lot less than it was a couple of years ago before congress overrode Trump and then Biden spent your children's future but really people living 100 years ago would think you were getting a pretty good deal."

Really? You think people from the 1940's would think that over regulation and malfeasance in government is a good deal? You really think that?

Maybe we should travel back to the 1780's and see how people would feel about a national debt of over 30 trillion dollars and see if they think that is a good deal.

Holy shit this person is so fucking out of touch and desperate to cling to any shred of the lie they can clutch.

Edit for: I cannot decide if it is delusion or denial at this point but how you can look around this country and not get hip to the fact that we are fucked is beyond me.

From USDebt.org
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These numbers are not part of a winning strategy.
 
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The reason eggs were more expensive in the 1900 was because chicken was not widely consumed.

Additionally, according to a USDA NASS report, in 1924 eggs production was 626 million with a population of 114 million.

In 2019, the US produced 8 Billion eggs with a population of 328.3 million.
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As such, it's very disingenuous to use egg data from when it was not widely produced to when it was widely produced.
 
But the benefits of this revolution have also been enormous. In 1905, an average male factory worker older than 16 took home $11.16 a week, enough to buy about 41 cartons of eggs. Today, the median man earns $1,176 a week, enough to buy more than 275 cartons of eggs, even at today’s elevated prices. If you can’t help cringing when you see the cashier ring up eggs that cost twice as much as they did a year ago, it might help to remember that however poor you feel, your ancestors would have taken one look at your grocery cart and declared you rich beyond their dreams.
They'd also wonder why their great-grandchild in their mid 20's is living in a glorified cell, with no husband/wife, no children, and no future prospects.
 
The reason eggs were more expensive in the 1900 was because chicken was not widely consumed.

Additionally, according to a USDA NASS report, in 1924 eggs production was 626 million with a population of 114 million.

In 2019, the US produced 8 Billion eggs with a population of 328.3 million.
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As such, it's very disingenuous to use egg data from when it was not widely produced to when it was widely produced.
Funny how chicken consumption REALLY kicks up around the same time fats started to be demonized as causing heart disease.
 
It's not completely wrong, to be honest. People in current year live in obscene luxury to the point where even kings that owned half the globe could never have even dreamed of the ways we've managed to eliminate all but the most minor inconvenience. Spoiled girls are comfortably sitting in their air conditioned houses, stomachs full of foods flown in from around the globe, whining to people thousands of miles away about how difficult their life is. And they're doing it by telling a magic rectangle to send special particles through the air that can talk to anyone else instantly. It's frankly fucking absurd how easy people have it these days.

The problem isn't that we have it better than our ancestors (well, that's another debate altogether). After all, the reason society exists is to improve over time. Each generation should live better than the previous one. The problem is our progress could have been even more fantastical, but external forces are halting societal evolution out of malice. Half the world was leaving the other half behind, and we can't have that. No sir. Better to tear everything down and ruin it for everyone than make some lazy idiots ten thousand miles away feel bad about themselves.

I'm not mad about the price of eggs because I can't afford it. I'm mad because it's yet another symptom of a cultural sickness that I'm not sure is curable any more.
 
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I'm getting conflicting signals here. On one hand, American "socialists" are simultaneously NATO cocksuckers and traitorous pedophiles, on the other hand, a guillotine should really be going chop chop right now.
 
This is such an idiotic argument. Agricultural technology has obviously improved since 70 years ago. The increase in efficiency naturally led to lower production costs per egg, which in turn led to a reduction in price per egg. If the price has returned to what it was 70 years ago despite the technological advancements, it's clearly indicative of a major economic problem.
 
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I'm getting conflicting signals here. On one hand, American "socialists" are simultaneously NATO cocksuckers and traitorous pedophiles, on the other hand, a guillotine should really be going chop chop right now.
Well if we implement socialism the price of eggs won't matter because there won't be any.
 
2-3 weeks ago price for a dozen jumbo eggs at commissary was $7.09. Last two weeks has been $5.95. Will be getting eggs there tomorrow, see what the price is.
 
2-3 weeks ago price for a dozen jumbo eggs at commissary was $7.09. Last two weeks has been $5.95. Will be getting eggs there tomorrow, see what the price is.
Was damn near $10 for an 18 pack the past few weeks; Feb. 4th dropped to like $7.95. Going down, but there was also that rumor going around about Tractor Supply feed inhibiting egg production in chickens, and God knows what other manufactured problems will come in the future.
 
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