The beauty of tariffs is that it creates a bottleneck that leaves other countries disinclined to do you any favors. Everything becomes transactional and exploitive.
I suspect any investigation will get shut down in a hot second - either by political donations to certain key individuals or by lack of capacity to do any investigations. Or both.
While the price of eggs was a campaign point for some politicians, the current crisis puts egg on their face which can only be washed away with greenbacks.
because less eggs == expensier eggs == more money. If everyone wants a restricted good, then the prices goes up and the one willing to pay more gets the good. And eggs are needed in a lot of areas starting with mayonaise for the quarter pounder and ending with the breakfast in rural restaurants known from the movies :)
wielding their market power to prevent others from:
while its not meant, that they prevent the small guy's small company or your neighbours from keeping chicken from laying eggs, its an economical question. If you're a big player, one possible way is to buy amounts of chicken food for even lower prices making it expensier for small quantity buyers to produce eggs. The eggs from competition are not competative in their price, so big mayonaise producers won't buy. ... And so on..
the bigger, the cheaper, the less competition is possible for the small ones.
well explained, and there's also the issue of chicks - farmers don't generally hatch their own eggs but buy chicks, and it's easy the big companies to manipulate that supply chain, indeed I believe there are ownership and licensing deals in place that favor the big producers.
Good point. There may be deals like x percent of your stock will be buyed by us. If I'm the stock owner, i would gladly agree and reduce the price, if x is bigger for one buyer than y+z+w percentages of three buyers. I would have a guarantee to sell more of my chickens for sure at once and would reduce the uncertainty of even finding three different buyers.. but this reduces the stake holders (different sellers) in the market and the big one can dictate the prices and produce amounts at will.
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[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 45.6 ms ] threadnope
I think this is fake news
the current shortage is not actually that great, just look at the numbers
and historically any shortage would have been quickly relieved by farmers increasing their capacity
that's where the shortage lies
the big producers deliberately constricting supply by not expanding capacity, and wielding market power to prevent others doing so
I believe there is a pending trade investigation on this point, so any 'news' about eggs should probably be taken with a pinch of salt (and pepper).
While the price of eggs was a campaign point for some politicians, the current crisis puts egg on their face which can only be washed away with greenbacks.
Why would they not expand capacity and how would they prevent others from doing so?
because less eggs == expensier eggs == more money. If everyone wants a restricted good, then the prices goes up and the one willing to pay more gets the good. And eggs are needed in a lot of areas starting with mayonaise for the quarter pounder and ending with the breakfast in rural restaurants known from the movies :)
wielding their market power to prevent others from:
while its not meant, that they prevent the small guy's small company or your neighbours from keeping chicken from laying eggs, its an economical question. If you're a big player, one possible way is to buy amounts of chicken food for even lower prices making it expensier for small quantity buyers to produce eggs. The eggs from competition are not competative in their price, so big mayonaise producers won't buy. ... And so on..
the bigger, the cheaper, the less competition is possible for the small ones.
Bigger is always winning.
All your eggs and Greenland are belong to us!
[1] https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/14/trump-egg-pr...
So that's, what, roughly 10-15% of egg-laying birds across the country? It takes less than 6 months for a chick to mature to egg-laying hen.
This source[1] asserts per-capita egg consumption was already realizing proportional decline for years since 2020 peak.
The real game[2] being played has a distinct smell.
[1] https://unitedegg.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/UEP_Website...
[2] https://doi.org/10.7275/cbv0-gv07
The market should be responding quickly to shortages. That it isn't does smell.
Part 2: How Chicken Genetics Barons Created the Egg Crisis (https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/fowl-play-how-chicken-gen...)
Part 3 hasn't been released yet, but it's a good read so far.