TG盗号软件技术文档|【唯一TG:@heimifeng8】|飞机盗号软件VIP破解技术✨谷歌搜索留痕排名,史上最强SEO技术,20年谷歌SEO经验大佬✨Who should get eggs in a shortage? : Planet Money : NPR

How much for that eggKenny Malone, photographed for NPR, 2 August 2025, in New York, NY. Photo by Mamadi Doumbouya for NPR.Jeff Guo, photographed for NPR, 2 August 2025, in New York, NY. Photo by Mamadi Doumbouya for NPR.

How much for that egg

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Sam Mertens checks on his chickens. Sam Mertens/NPR hide caption

toggle caption Sam Mertens/NPR

Sam Mertens checks on his chickens.

Sam Mertens/NPR

Recently, one of our NPR colleagues wrote a message to all of NPR saying he had extra eggs to sell for cheap, but needed a fair way to distribute them during a shortage. What is Planet Money here for if not to get OVERLY involved in this kind of situation?

Our colleague didn't want to charge more than $5, so we couldn't just auction the eggs off. A lottery? Too boring, he said.

Okay! A very Planet Money puzzle to solve.

Today on the show, we go in search of novel systems to help our colleague decide who gets his scarce resource: cheap, farm-fresh eggs. We steal from the world of new product development to try and secretly test for egg love, and we discover a pricing method used in development economics that may be America's next great gameshow.

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