tvguy
Question anything the facts don't support.
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2003
- Messages
- 47,304
I think eggs are an awful example because that situation has no link to politics or tariffs, that has to do with the deaths of 53 million chickens from bird flu.Best example I can think of: we bought eggs 2 weeks ago for 2.99 a Dozen yes the limit was 1 and it was at the very large supermarket we shop at. Week after not on sale yes they are higher but nowhere near the 6-10 the once were.
Few are going to pay a high price from X when Y is selling the same for a lot less making X lower its prices or they will not sell any - being eggs due expire X will have a total loss.
Sales are down and have been down for months to almost if not a year on what is considered non-essential if a retailer raised prices they simply will simply sell even less.
And I would do cartwheels.......if I could......if I found eggs for only $2.99. I'm just happy they are down to $6.34 a dozen here from over $10 a dozen six weeks ago. But, we have cut back on egg use. Between meals and baking, we used to consume a dozen a week, we now go two weeks on a dozen.