Summary
Major egg corporations may be using avian flu as a ruse to hike up prices, generating record profits while hurting American consumers, new research suggests.
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Egg prices soared to nearly $5 a dozen, rising 157% since before the avian flu outbreak, despite only a 9% drop in laying hens.
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Cal-Maine, controlling 20% of the US market, saw a sevenfold profit increase in 2023 compared to 2021.
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Over 166 million poultry have been culled, but critics say consolidation and slow flock replacement may inflate prices beyond the virus’s 12-24% direct cost.
Lawmakers urge investigations, while the Trump administration plans vaccines, reduced culling, and a $1bn avian flu fund to help stabilize costs.
In the US there are exceptions to the charge anything standard, such as limitations on gouging on gas pricing during emergencies and laws against companies colliding on price hikes. The protections kick in when customers don’t have a choice, and it is possible that all egg companies raising prices to seek profits while blaming something that has far less of an effect than the prices indicate could potentially fall into one of those two categories.
Not that it matters as the penalties are always far less than the abuse, but pricing in the US isn’t a complete wild west.
Chicken egg shortage is not an emergency. gas is irreplaceable for transport, eggs are not irreplaceable for food.
Bicycles, walking.
People who hoarded toilet paper and hand sanitizer were punished despite soap and water existing.
https://www.today.com/news/brothers-who-hoarded-17-700-bottles-hand-sanitizer-forced-donate-t176028