Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Egg price hikes too soon to tell

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As avian influenza cases rise, will consumers be paying higher prices again for eggs?

“It’s too soon to tell,” Jada Thompson, agricultur­al economist with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e, said in a news release.

Avian influenza was blamed for higher egg prices in 2023, which peaked at $4.82 per dozen in January, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. By September 2023, as the supply chain recovered, egg prices dipped to $2.07 per dozen. However, prices rose again, hitting $2.99 in March 2024.

In early April, Cal-Maine Foods Inc., the nation’s largest producer of fresh eggs, said it had to destroy more than a million laying hens and more than 337,000 pullets after highly pathogenic avian influenza was detected at its facility in Parmer County, Texas. A pullet is a hen that has not begun to lay eggs.

“I don’t think this one outbreak is enough to make us see the high fluctuatio­ns we have seen,” Thompson said.

She said there are two reasons for this, “one, we haven’t had the consistent barrage against the egg industry in the same way, which meant that one large complex like this event may cause some regional price changes but won’t compound the overall price situation.

“Two, the replenishm­ent stocks aren’t as impacted as before,” Thompson said. “Before, we had outbreaks on egg premises and on pullet and parent stock premises, meaning the birds that would replace the ones that got sick were also in short supply. That isn’t the same shortage as before, so the impact won’t take as long to recover — hopefully.”

Egg producers have also taken actions to prevent a repeat of 2023.

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