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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"Stop believing your lying eyes!"
Your eyes can deceive you, don't trust them

Agent Abe Caprine said:
Weren't slaves allowed to keep chickens because they were cheap?
Chicken was a very rare food for slaves and like with everyone else, reserved for special occasions. Historically chicken was one of the most expensive meats and something only the rich ate on a regular basis. Everybody else would generally only have it when they killed old hens who stopped laying and weren't of any further use. It was only in the 20th century when techniques and technology allowing for large scale rapid chicken farming started to become available that chicken became a much cheaper and easier to obtain food for the average person. Even then it wasn't really until post ww2 that it started taking off

That said the premise of this article is insane and nonsensical. The same logic could be used to claim that the average north korean shouldn't be complaining about their lack of food and such because food, heat and good clothing was so rare in the ice age and neolithic period that people starved to death before 20 all the time. Chicken was more expensive than beef in the medieval period too, what the fuck does that have to do with its near doubling in price today because of inflation? Fuck all. This is nothing but manipulative bs and circular logic. Whats next? The economy of greece isn't utter shit and people are doing fine cause they eat meat sometimes, as opposed to ancient greeks who almost never had access to it?
 
LOL this is like when rich people with massive mansions, personal jets, high end personal trainers, and connections in high places lecture the masses on how ungrateful they are.

When’s the last time these upper class twits actually paid for their own groceries? Or pumped gas into their own cars?

Luckily I doubt people are falling for it. Oh wait… be distracted by the new Goddesses Beyonce and Madonna! Worship them, you shit-covered plebians!!!
 
It’s pretty rare for something to be more expensive in America than in Canada. I can get a dozen eggs for 4.99 or less, or about 3.75USD.
Yeah, it's actually been a bit weird reading posts about absurdly high egg prices over the last while. My last two purchases of eggs (both being a dozen in a carton, extra large eggs) came just a few days after Christmas, and then again a few days ago. Both times they were for around $4.30 ($3.20 USD.)

The oldest receipt that I have that included me buying eggs is from early August where I bought a dozen (but these were only large eggs) and it was $3.80 ($2.82 USD.)

All things considered, it's the price of meat (and to a lesser degree, milk) that pisses me off the most.
 
We've had chicken coops for like 3 years. No problem. There's a single bit of city ordnance and that's only 1 rooster (to keep people from having to deal with a dozen faggoty roosters yowling at dawn). We've got foxes and raccoons, so you've got to have a good coop.

Lately this new faggot with Code Enforcement has been going around trying to tell people that they can't have chickens.

Which is fucking weird.

"Point me at the city ordinances where I can't. Oh, wait, it says RIGHT FUCKING HERE that I can. Here's even my permits to build, and it's listed, one chicken coop."
>Well, uh, it's illegal now.
"Oh, they voted on it at the last city meeting?
>Yeah. Yeah, it was voted on...
"I was there. No they didn't."

I called Code Enforcement and told them about this dipshit and they said they'd have a talk with him.

He's a CA transplant that immediately weaseled his way into Code Enforcement and is now pissing a LOT of people off.

>You have a wrecked car on your property!
"That one?"
>Yes.
"The one that's up on jacks, that the engine was pulled?"
>Yes
"The one I was WORKING ON when you drove up?"
>Uh, yes.
"It's not wrecked, we're putting on new body panels to replace the rusted out ones. We're restoring it."
>Uh, it's illegal.
"Fucking show me!"

The guy's a fucking dipshit.

The fact he's got a sudden hard on for the chicken coops is weird.

My daughter's chicken coop is all painted, with flower patterns and little windows and shit. He tried to cite her for an eye sore.
 
We've had chicken coops for like 3 years. No problem. There's a single bit of city ordnance and that's only 1 rooster (to keep people from having to deal with a dozen faggoty roosters yowling at dawn). We've got foxes and raccoons, so you've got to have a good coop.

Lately this new faggot with Code Enforcement has been going around trying to tell people that they can't have chickens.

Which is fucking weird.

"Point me at the city ordinances where I can't. Oh, wait, it says RIGHT FUCKING HERE that I can. Here's even my permits to build, and it's listed, one chicken coop."
>Well, uh, it's illegal now.
"Oh, they voted on it at the last city meeting?
>Yeah. Yeah, it was voted on...
"I was there. No they didn't."

I called Code Enforcement and told them about this dipshit and they said they'd have a talk with him.

He's a CA transplant that immediately weaseled his way into Code Enforcement and is now pissing a LOT of people off.

>You have a wrecked car on your property!
"That one?"
>Yes.
"The one that's up on jacks, that the engine was pulled?"
>Yes
"The one I was WORKING ON when you drove up?"
>Uh, yes.
"It's not wrecked, we're putting on new body panels to replace the rusted out ones. We're restoring it."
>Uh, it's illegal.
"Fucking show me!"

The guy's a fucking dipshit.

The fact he's got a sudden hard on for the chicken coops is weird.

My daughter's chicken coop is all painted, with flower patterns and little windows and shit. He tried to cite her for an eye sore.
What's funny is under constitutional law (lol), even if they did actually pass a law against it through legit means, it's not supposed to apply to people who already had chicken coops due to ex post facto which prevents a change in the law from negatively affecting someone who was acting under the previous law. Of course "constitutional law" is just ink on paper which doesn't really have any effect on things.
 
Egg prices are dropping? Where? A couple weeks ago, 18 eggs at Walmart was 8 something and now they're almost $10. Hell, a dozen of Eggland's Best is cheaper than the Walmart ones.
 
I don't eat eggs, so it doesn't matter what price they are. I never cook anything that requires eggs either. Sure, eggs were expensive in the past but in modern times eggs shouldn't be that expensive. The whole process of getting the eggs has been made so the eggs are plentiful and cheap. This is just more cope my journalist. It's not Bidens fault you guys, honest. You should be lucky you get to pay more for eggs because back in the past eggs were super expensive. Cope cope cope cope cope.
 
Egg prices are dropping? Where? A couple weeks ago, 18 eggs at Walmart was 8 something and now they're almost $10. Hell, a dozen of Eggland's Best is cheaper than the Walmart ones.
thats and US problem. the cheap eggs in germany are 2€ for 10 and my eggman wants 6,50 for the pack of 20. but that included delivery to my door.
 
I don't eat eggs, so it doesn't matter what price they are. I never cook anything that requires eggs either. Sure, eggs were expensive in the past but in modern times eggs shouldn't be that expensive. The whole process of getting the eggs has been made so the eggs are plentiful and cheap. This is just more cope my journalist. It's not Bidens fault you guys, honest. You should be lucky you get to pay more for eggs because back in the past eggs were super expensive. Cope cope cope cope cope.
I thought it was capitalisms fault?
 
This fucker is not noticing that 100-200 years ago nobody fucking BOUGHT eggs except weird city people who didn't have backyard chickens.

Most everyone a hunner years ago had their own supply of eggs, so store bought eggs would be rare, and therefore expensive.
 
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.
funny how "it was worse then" only applies to some things
black guy freaking out over the n-word?
well it was worse back then, they used to lynch you
oh wait, that wouldn't work on these people
 
I'm glad you came out of your shell to post that. Keep it up, and you'll be a hard-boiled kiwi farmer in no time!
Did you need to egg him on?
Look, this is no yolk!
Oh, quit your clucking, you mother hen.
Aren't the Brits now poor and should be referring to those cookbooks or rice pudding and other Depression-era food?
You act like they ever quit eating beans on toast and other wartime necessities in lieu of things like food. Its why whenever they eat curry their bowels undergo a Blitz of their own.
This fucker is not noticing that 100-200 years ago nobody fucking BOUGHT eggs except weird city people who didn't have backyard chickens.
Weird city people in... 1923? They did have home fridges back then, even if they cost you more than a Model T.
 
I had a Wisconsin chicken farmer explain this shit to me and it actually made sense, figures it took going to an actual farmer and not some journalist.

1) Chickens lay fewer eggs in the winter. Always have. Has to do with daylight hours. Big egg farms can use artificial daylight but there's still some dropoff.

2) Eggs don't go directly from the coop to the store, they're warehoused. The warehouse step also allows the building of a "stockpile" every year that has a ton of extra eggs by fall, which are then siphoned off as winter production lows require the stockpile to be dug into.

3) Bird flu struck bad this year, requiring culls. But critically...

4) This year's bird flu struck in October through January, when egg production is already stretched and even in a typical year the stockpiles would be being depleted. More typically, bird flu culls in the US have occurred in spring (March 2017, April 2015, April 2007, April 2004, among others). Spring culls lead to mildly higher prices by summer, but new chickens hatched in spring can become layers so quick that the stockpile is pretty much good to go by the next fall.

5) If you hatch a new laying hen in late fall, she often won't produce eggs until spring (unlike spring-hatched chickens, which will start laying within weeks).


This confluence of factors led to the stockpile depleting way faster than normal, with no way to induce the existing chicken population to produce more. But the farmer said the issue is basically coming to an end, the chickens hatched to replace the flu culls are now starting to lay and the prices will drop like a stone soon.
 
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