Wednesday, July 13, 2005

The Price of Eggs

One of the famous examples of excess during California's 1849 Gold Rush was the price of eggs, something over a dollar each, according to legend.

Today the price of eggs is being set by the California stem cell agency – at least the price of human eggs from women.

That price appears to be zero.

No real surprise there because Prop. 71 banned payment for human eggs except for direct expenses. But some folks are not entirely happy.

Reporter Edie Lau of The Sacramento Bee wrote about the egg economics earlier this month. She said that Robert Klein, chairman of the stem cell agency, said "the payment ban was intended as a safeguard against women - especially poor women - feeling pressured or enticed to sell their eggs." He said employers should help out.

Lau reported on a meeting of the Scientific and Medical Accountability Standards Working Group of the stem cell agency, formally known as the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine.

She wrote that some witnesses were not pleased with CIRM's position.

"'I don't know why you put (yourselves) in a position to not compensate for time and effort,' said Jose Cibelli, a stem cell researcher at Michigan State University. 'It's something you will come to regret.'

"Ann Kiessling, a Harvard University biologist who runs an independent, nonprofit center that solicits egg donors specifically for stem cell research, predicted that some women who wish to provide eggs will be unable to if, for example, they aren't reimbursed for lost wages.

"'All normal, healthy subjects that undergo any research in this country are compensated for their time,' she said."

Lau continued:

"Klein, who also sits on the standards working group, did not respond to criticism of the rule during the meeting, but said in an interview that the prohibition cannot be changed, nor should it.

"'It is a more challenging provision, but it provides us with a higher ethical standard,'" Klein said.

"He said he hopes employers will support employees who wish to donate eggs, and continue to pay them as some employers do for jury duty. 'It's a public service to society,' Klein said."

You don't have to be Milton Friedman (the Nobel-winning free market economist who lives in San Francisco) to understand that if human eggs become sought after, their price will rise, regardless of Prop. 71. Another human product -- blood -- is purchased regularly at very low prices, but it is a common commodity. The market for human eggs and their price are yet to be determined. But there is no doubt that a statutory attempt (a la Prop. 71) to set a price (commonly known as price-fixing) will fail.

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