Sujet : Re: Eggless meals for the week
De : nobody (at) *nospam* home.com (Janet)
Groupes : rec.food.cookingDate : 25. Apr 2025, 09:48:54
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <MPG.42755cc3c2c3644b2be@news.individual.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
User-Agent : MicroPlanet-Gravity/3.0.4
In article <f443bc78b2765a20c82496ee5a406d82
@
www.novabbs.org>,
ItsJoanNotJoAnn@webtv.net says...
On Thu, 24 Apr 2025 21:19:34 +0000, Bruce wrote:
On Thu, 24 Apr 2025 21:08:15 +0000, ItsJoanNotJoAnn@webtv.net
(ItsJoanNotJoAnn) wrote:
>
On Thu, 24 Apr 2025 20:07:14 +0000, Graham wrote:
>
On 2025-04-24 1:48 p.m., Dave Smith wrote:
>
How about restaurant breakfast prices increases attributed to the eggs?
I imagine they will be staying higher long after the egg prices return
to normal. Of course, there is always the chance they won't.
>
Unlikely they'll go down in the current economic chaos that King Donald
has caused.
>
The Donald has caused an increase in the price of eggs
produced in the USA?????
>
That's not what he said.
>
>
Oh?? How so?
Egg prices have nothing to do with whatever 'current
economic chaos.'
quite apart from avian flu, commercial egg/chicken
producers like any other agri business are affected by
all rising costs due to tariffs and retaliatory trade
wars.
Tariffs, trade wars, Trump's failures to grasp or
address the effects of climate change on USA farming, will
affect every part of US food production.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trump_administration_farmer_bailouts
While US chicken farms have to pay more for chickenfeed,
chicken medication, biosecurity, machine parts, fuel,
labour, those cost increases must stay on the price of
eggs in shops. Or, the producers will go bust.
Janet UK