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Wednesday July 23, 2008
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Egg Prices Up Because Laying An Egg Costs More
By PETER KROUSE
Image
Thousands of eggs await cleaning, sorting and packaging at Sauders Amish Country Eggs processing plant in Winesburg, Ohio. (Photo by Chris Stephens)
c.2008 Newhouse News Service

Eggs have been so expensive that hoodlums thought twice about throwing them.

OK. That's a joke.

But they've been high, peaking nationally in March above $2.20 per dozen at grocery stores. And while they've since come down, they're still well above the low, low egg prices consumers enjoyed a couple of years ago.

Higher prices for oil and natural gas have a lot to do with it. They increase the cost of chicken feed and boost utility bills throughout the egg-production process.

The odyssey of the humble egg — from hen to household — is a graphic example of how soaring energy costs have led to escalating prices up and down the grocery aisle. At some point, increased costs pass through to the consumer. Exactly how and when is convoluted because supply and demand ultimately determine how much egg producers can get for their goods.

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TOP STORIES
AROUND THE NATION
Newhouse Spotlight

The Staten Island Advance is a community newspaper serving the 460,000 residents of New York City’s greenest borough and New York State’s fastest growing county.
Featured Correspondent
Susan Larson, The Times-Picayune

Susan Larson has been the book editor at The Times-Picayune since 1988; prior to that, she was a bookseller and a member of the boards of the Tennessee Williams/New Orleans Literary Festival and the New Orleans Gulf South Booksellers Association.

Special Reports
Residents walk the streets to reclaim neighborhoods
CLEVELAND — Wearing jeans and hooded sweatshirts, residents in the Ohio City neighborhood set up lawn chairs on the corner of Lorain Avenue and West 47th Street and watch from the sidelines of the sex trade like spectators at a football game.

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