The White House on March 17 announced a drop in egg and gasoline prices, calling it a win for the Trump administration’s economic agenda.
The average wholesale price per dozen of eggs has dropped to $3.10, down 47 percent from $6.55 per dozen from Jan. 21, 2025, the White House said.
A primary reason for the skyrocketing prices is avian influenza, which has led to the culling of tens of millions of egg-laying hens in recent months.
It takes months for infected farms to dispose of the carcasses, sanitize their farms, and raise new birds, she said, while expressing optimism that the plan will help prices.
“It’s going to take a while to get through, I think in the next month or two, but hopefully by summer,” Rollins said.
The USDA has enough staff to respond to bird flu despite the recent cuts to the federal workforce, Rollins said.
“Will we have the resources needed to address the plan I just laid out? We are convinced that we will,” she said, “as we realign and evaluate where USDA has been spending money, where our employees are spending their time.”
Aside from egg prices, the Trump administration on Monday said that gasoline prices have also dropped in recent weeks.
The Trump administration has faced some blowback in recent days over its economic polices, particularly tariffs, and declines in the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq.
“There’s no reason that it has to [go into a recession],“ he said in response to an NBC News moderator’s question. ”But I can tell you that if we’d kept on this track, what I could guarantee is we would have had a financial crisis. I’ve studied it. I’ve taught it.
“And if we had kept up at these spending levels, that everything was unsustainable. We are resetting and we are putting things on a sustainable path.”