Canada91Ƶs egg industry appears to be quietly sidestepping widespread shortages and wildly spiking prices affecting other countries, and some say supply management is to thank.
The system, which controls the supply, import and farm price of eggs, poultry and dairy, is often criticized as benefitting Canadian farmers at the expense of consumers. Critics blame supply management whenever prices of eggs and milk in Canada surpass those south of the border.
But as disease, climate change and geopolitical unrest threaten global food supplies, supporters say the upside of supply management is increasingly apparent.
91ƵWe have a made-in-Canada system that has never been more critical to food security in Canada,91Ƶ said University of Waterloo history professor Bruce Muirhead, a former research chair for Egg Farmers of Canada.
91ƵIt91Ƶs keeping family farms alive and eggs on store shelves at a time when we91Ƶre seeing shortages around the world.91Ƶ
Canada isn91Ƶt immune to the conditions affecting egg prices and supply in other countries.
Avian influenza, or bird flu, labour shortages, supply chain issues and soaring feed, fuel and packaging costs have all affected egg production and processing costs in Canada over the past year.
Statistics Canada said egg prices climbed 16.5 per cent year over year in December, making a dozen eggs that cost about $3.25 last year now $3.75.
While it91Ƶs a significant increase, it91Ƶs a fraction of the spiralling costs recorded in other countries.
In the United States, for example, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said egg prices were up 59.9 per cent in December compared with a year earlier.
In states like Arizona, California, Nevada and Florida, the cost of a carton of eggs exceeded US$6 a dozen or about $8 Canadian in recent weeks. Stores in some regions have even rationed eggs to avoid empty shelves amid supply chain issues and possible shortages.
The situation in the U.S. has prompted accusations of alleged price collusion among the nation91Ƶs top egg producers, while some news reports have suggested shoppers are travelling to border towns in Mexico or Canada to buy more affordable eggs.
In the United Kingdom, major supermarkets Tesco, Asda and Lidl have also set limits on how many eggs customers can buy, while some egg farmers say they can no longer break even. Egg prices in December were up 28.9 per cent year over year, the U.K.91Ƶs Office for National Statistics reported.
New Zealand is also experiencing a nationwide egg shortage, leaving some store shelves bare and even prompting some consumers to rush out to buy their own backyard chickens. Statistics New Zealand said in an email the country91Ƶs egg prices increased 28.8 per cent in December 2022 compared with December 2021.
But critics say prices in Canada haven91Ƶt soared as drastically as in other countries for the simple reason that prices were already high to begin with.
91ƵWhen prices are already among the highest in the world, it91Ƶs no surprise that our prices didn91Ƶt spike quite as much,91Ƶ said Krystle Wittevrongel, a senior policy analyst with the Montreal Economic Institute.
91ƵIt91Ƶs easy to maintain more price stability when we have huge, excessively high prices to begin with.91Ƶ
Provincial egg marketing boards have indicated that prices in Canada are starting to come down.
Egg Farmers of Ontario, for example, dropped the price farmers receive for a dozen eggs by 14 cents as of Jan. 29. It91Ƶs unclear whether processors and retailers will pass along those savings to consumers, though egg prices in some stores appear to have lowered by a few cents in recent days.
While egg marketing boards set farm prices, processors set the wholesale price of eggs and grocers set the retail price consumers pay.
91ƵWe don91Ƶt set the retail price at all,91Ƶ Egg Farmers of Canada CEO Tim Lambert said. 91ƵWe get paid based on our costs of production. We91Ƶre seeing grain prices ease up right now, and so our barn gate price is decreasing.91Ƶ
Meanwhile, egg supply in Canada has remained steady even as shortages continue to plague other countries.
91ƵWe have definitely faced challenges,91Ƶ Lambert said. 91ƵBut our system has been really robust at keeping eggs on the shelves. If there are shortages, they91Ƶre local and temporary.91Ƶ
One of the strengths of Canada91Ƶs egg industry is the greater number of smaller farms across the country, he said.
The average egg farm in Canada has about 25,000 laying hens. In contrast, the average farm in the U.S. has about two million birds, Lambert said.
91ƵIt91Ƶs a highly concentrated big business in the U.S.,91Ƶ Lambert said.
Cal-Maine Foods, the largest producer and distributor of shell eggs in the U.S., is traded on the Nasdaq with a total flock of about 42 million layers. Its share price has soared 45 per cent over the past year.
Experts say the challenge with a highly consolidated industry is that disease outbreak can have a larger effect on supply. For example, if the country91Ƶs laying hens are concentrated into a handful of larger barns 91Ƶ rather than a larger number of smaller barns 91Ƶ the impact of having to euthanize a flock during a bird flu outbreak is also bigger.
91ƵIn Canada, production is pretty well distributed across the across the country,91Ƶ said Université Laval professor Maurice Doyon, an Egg Industry Economic Research Chair. 91ƵJust mathematically the risk is lower, because we don91Ƶt have that huge concentration.91Ƶ
In the United States, about 44.5 million laying hens were affected by avian influenza, representing about 14 per cent of production, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada spokesperson Samantha Seary said.
In Canada, about 1.6 million laying hens were affected by bird flu, or about six per cent of Canadian production, she said.
Canada91Ƶs egg industry is also better positioned to withstand other issues from supply chain problems to climate change, Doyon said.
91ƵSupply management ensures a healthy enough margin that farmers in Canada can take care of the health of the hens and the environment because they have the means to do it,91Ƶ he said.
Still, while supply management may create a sustainable egg industry, critics say it comes at too high a cost.
They say the advantages don91Ƶt outweigh the downsides of higher prices for consumers over the long run.
91ƵCanada91Ƶs stuck on this protectionist, archaic system that benefits a small group of entrenched interests,91Ƶ Wittevrongel said. 91ƵIt seems like we91Ƶre in a better position now when in reality our prices are so much higher at any other time of year.91Ƶ
But lots of items are more expensive in Canada than in the United States 91Ƶ and the overwhelming majority are not supply managed, Doyon said.
91ƵLet91Ƶs look at bread or a can of soup or even a new car. These are more expensive in Canada than in the United States, but they91Ƶre not under supply management,91Ƶ he said.
Even among supply managed goods within Canada, items like eggs, milk and butter are generally much cheaper in bigger cities like Toronto than in other regions such as the Maritimes, Doyon said.
For example, a dozen Sobeys Compliments white large eggs cost $3.75 in Toronto, according to the chain91Ƶs Voilà online grocery website. The exact same container of eggs in Halifax costs $4.85.
The price difference between Toronto and Halifax underscores the regional differences that exist even within the same country under the same system.
91ƵI91Ƶm not saying that supply management has no impact. But you just cannot attribute the entire difference in price between say Canada and the United States to supply management.91Ƶ
Brett Bundale, The Canadian Press
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