— Lancaster Farming. Saturday. June 20.1970 4 On Stopping Egg Busts Why do egg busts occur 9 The egg market is a classic example of what happens in a free enterprise system when supply of a product fluctuates wildly in the face or an inelastic or stable demand. When supply is low, prices arc high; when supply is high, prices are low. Authorities agree that irregardless of the supply, the demand for eggs at least under present marketing techniques re mains fairly constant. Therefore, only a slight change in egg supply in one direction will send the price of eggs sharply in th« opposite direction. The UEP, in its projections, cites a four to one relationship between egg production volume and price. This means that a change in supply of eggs causes a change lour times greater, percentage-wise, in price m the opposite direction. According to some observers, however, the UEP is conservativ e in its four to one relationship. What actually happens in a market bust, they say, is that the bottom literally falls out of the market, the weak est sellers set the pace; since traditionally in a glut the weakest sellers haven’t reallj had a market, the bottom becomes a give away situation. What has always happened in the egg narket is that after e\ery bust, in which a large number of producers are weeded out, wiped out may be more precise, a oenod of lower egg supply and resulting nigh prices follows. High egg prices imme diately entice new and inexperienced pro- ducers and existing producers their production. The resulting flood of new eggs, which generally has not really been more than an overall five per cent increase, causes egg prices to plummet below' the cost of produc tion. When enough producers cut back or get out to allow the supply pressure to ease, egg pnecs go up again. So it goes, boom and bust, boom and bust. Officials Look the Other Way What You Don't Know Can Be Fatal While the government has a huge ap paratus supposedly for supplvmg informa tion about U S farming, most of the data vv e get is completely out of touch with what the farmer and the nation want and need to know. The present egg industry scare on o\ ei - production is a shining example While United Egg Produce:s has been flashing warning signals tor months in cluding advertisements in color, about an impending egg market bust, v irtualiv ah the data we ha\e received from state and federal officials w'ould indicate business as usual. While all the knowledgeable egg pro ducers and allied industrymen we have talked to now see the egg bust as v irtually inevitable within weeks or months un less unprecedented corrective action is taken state and federal officials who are paid to inform and assist the farmer have said almost nothing. The situation spells out a warning loud LANCASTER FARMING Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly P. 0 Box 266 - Lititz, Pa 17543 Office- 22 E. Mam St.. Lititz, Pa 17543 Phone: Lancaster 394 3047 or Lititz 626-2191 Robert G. Campbell. AdveiUsing Director Zane Wilson, Managing Editor Subscription price $2 per yeai in Lancaster County, S 3 elsewhei e Established No\ ember 4,1955 Published e\ ery Satuidaj b% Lancaster Fanning. Lititz Pa Second Class Postage paid at Lititz Pa 17543 Member of Newspaper Farm Editors Assn Pa. Newspaper Publishers Association, and National New spaper Association But what the egg industry is facing to day is not a small or normal egg bust, but a big. record, huge supply increase on the up side. Most authorities are absolutely con \inced that if massive corrective action is not taken industry w ide on a scale proposed by the UEP (see page 1), the industry will inevitably have the most violent and pro longer downturn in its history. For those who remember 1967, industry leaders say we are on the doorstep of a bust that will make 1967 look like good times. Although it is late in the game and the egg industry has never before mobilized to stop such a catastrophe, industry leaders are assuring us that it can and will be done. We wish them all the luck in the world and certainly advise our readers to listen to their advice very carefully; but we note that not just local poultrymen. but egg producers and allied industrymen across the nation must cooperate. Can it be done? We’re skeptical. We don’t see how the industry at the last minute can find the courage to change without once more tast ing the bitter fruits of financial loss caused by prices low er than the cost of production. But probably the work done now will not be forgotten when the disaster begins and the work now may cause a much quicker recovery than would otherwise be possible. Looking beyond this situation, we see some real hope that the industry is mobiliz ing to avoid similar situations in the fu ture. We think this effort should and will in clude not only the stabalization of produc tion but also major efforts in the market place to de\elop and standardize new means of making eggs attractive to buy ers, new techniques for controlling the rate of consumption. increase In the long run, we think that only a significant change in the_ violent relation ship between egg supply and demand can stop the boom and bust egg market cycles and clear for egg producers. It’s still a dog eat dog world in the egg business insofar as state and federal government officials are concerned. These officials have indicated they will continue to go through the motions of pro- ducing relatively meaningless and unre lated material, but they won't tabulate, de fine and interpret that material in such a way that egg producers can understand what’s going on in the business As a result, poultrymen must continue, as in the past, to rely on their own resources to save themselves. Unfortunately, in the past egg men haven't done so well, the industry has gone through one violent boom and bust period after another; as a result, the egg industry can probably claim the distinction of hav ing produced more bankruptcies than just about any other single farm enterprise. But despite these violent price swings, and 1970 will probably show a shift from record highs to record lows, state and fed eral officialdom has not made any move toward supplying the type of information that can avert such disastrous price fluc tuations. And we are convinced that the price swings stem largely from producer ignor ance resulting from a basic information void. We are com meed that producers can and will make intelligent decisions that w ill keep the market relatively stable if they are guen adequate, reliable informa tion on which to base production decisions. What producers get. however, are year ly figures on what percentage they should increase production nationally and monthly figures on how much they actually have been increasing production. While egg t>pe chick hatch, the advance (Continued on Page 11) To Practice Sanitation The need for strict In estock sanitation practices is always present but especially impor tant at this time with an out break of hog cholera in Chester County. This highly contagious disease requires very strict quarantine regulations and careful management to stop its spread Local producers are cautioned about their source of feeder pigs, and to be very careful about bx-inging the in fection to the home held Eveiyone should cooperate to eradicate this dreaded disease of hogs. To Seed Cover Crop Com growers who have not used atrazine as a weed kill er, and want to maintain the organic matter in their soil, may want to broadcast lyegrass or field bromegrass immediately I’M ONLY ONE Lesson for June 21,1970 kuckgrtunal Scripture; Romans 12 through 13. Devotional Reading: Romans 12.3-12. You are a soldier in the United States Army stationed in West ern Germany. You and seventy two other American soldiers comprise a convoy of tracks mak troop movement :adt in West Ger many through East Germany a long the autobahn to West Berlin. Usually the trip is uneventful ex cept for periodic check-points a long the way. Lately, how- _ ever, there has Rev. Althouse ]j Gen some mount ing tension in Berlin and there is some growing apprehension among your officers that the So viets may retaliate with some petty irritations on the autobahns. You hope that if the communists decide to needle the American forces again they’ll pick a differ ent convoy with which to do it. The rut people get in Overcome evil with good says, “Marienborn checkpoint.” Fifteen minutes at the most and nnc! ln.? LI h fl+ PP f S p ' you should be on your way once L. «t»rfJS* Sf SToonw? iTL'tS Klfer e ,h ' tot let us pass until we fall out and or more na ' line up to be counted.” !?« «„ ™ c , an You know what that means... *s° possibly a long wait. It is U.S. f° policy to refuse to get out of the refntb LLt S?® tak * trucks for counting. You don’t • I “° nljr one v really understand why, but that’s ho y thp wav if i«3 Vnn and fbp A nn Cflll do, SIS Paul puts it, to w 3 ‘LtV«S.“SS.VS «•“ ”«■ «**" - Until SOnieOne backs down. You [Based on outlines copyrighted by th* chuckle, half in disgust and half £ ,v,s, °n of Chr.st.cn Education, National an amusement, when jou consider OT VJi* 'V.« that neither you nor the Soviet s * rvic ») soldiers standing guard- really understand why you can’t get out of the truck and why it is just-as important to 'theili to have -'„ • * NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent after llieir last cultivation. On fields that will be in corn for several consecutive years the cover ci'op to plow down next spring is good soil and water management. Most of the herbi cides used this spring on corn, other than atrazine, will permit a cover crop to grow this fall. To Operate Combines Properly Winter barley and wheat har vest time is near and the com bines will be serviced and ready to go In many cases the ma chine is in excellent condition but the operator is in too big a hurry to allow it to perform properly, as a result, too much of the giain is thrown out with the straw and we get volunteer growth this fall. In addition, tough grain makes the job more difficult and requires a slower pace “Haste makes Waste” in this case and reduces the re turn per acre. tu do so. It’s just part of the )ld War rut people get into, iu decide. The first two hours are not too id, but after three hours of tog in the cramped trucks, •u and your comrades begin to t irritable. It is with gratitude, ten, that you hear the sergeant ill your name to deliver a mes ige to the C.O. in one of the trucks up the line. This means an opportunity to get some fresh air and stretch your legs. The dangerous sparks As you stand waiting for a reply, you notice a Soviet guard with a tommygun. You don’t look at him and he doesn’t look at you. It seems best that way. The only sound is a chilly wind that whistles around you and the scrape of the guard’s boots. Then it happens! A sudden gust of wind lifts your fatigue cap off your head and deposits it in the dust . . . right in the path of the guard. You extend your hand forward in a gesture, but it is too late and the boot crushes the hat into the dust. “Hey,” you shout and instinctive ly rush toward him. He stops and turns toward you inquiringly, his foot still resting upon your hat. “You’re on my hat!” you shout. “Da?” he replies as if he does not understand you. There seems to be a slight trace of amusement playing at the corners of his mouth. Did he do it on purpose, you ask your self? Doesn’t he see it? You be gin to feel an overpowering urge to shove him and get him off your hat. “What’s going on here?” a sharp voice asks behind you and you turn to see your C.O. and the Soviet commander.