Political Calculations
Unexpectedly Intriguing!
27 November 2025

Thanksgiving has a defining theme in 2025. The population of turkeys raised on U.S. farms shrank from the previous year. The size of those live turkeys also shrank. Completing the trifecta, the Farm Bureau Federation confirms the price of a Thanksgiving dinner has shrunk as well, led lower by a big drop in the price of turkeys!

That cost had peaked at $64.05 for a 10-item menu in 2022 thanks to the runaway inflation unleashed by the Biden-Harris administration. Since then, the cost has dropped each year, falling to $61.17 in 2023 and to $58.08 in 2024. This year, that cost dropped 2.9% to $55.18.

The Farm Bureau describes how a drop in the price of turkeys contributed to 2025's lower Thanksgiving dinner cost:

The centerpiece on most Thanksgiving tables – the turkey – dramatically decreased in price, which helped bring down the overall cost of dinner. The average price for a 16-pound frozen turkey is $21.50. That is $1.34 per pound, down more than 16% from last year. While the wholesale price for fresh turkey is up from 2024, grocery stores are featuring Thanksgiving deals and attempting to draw consumer demand back to turkey, leading to lower retail prices for a holiday bird....

“It’s encouraging to see some relief in the price of turkeys, as it is typically the most expensive part of the meal,” said AFBF Economist Faith Parum, Ph.D. “Farmers are still working to rebuild turkey flocks that were devastated by avian influenza, but overall demand has also fallen. The combination will help ensure turkey will remain an affordable option for families celebrating Thanksgiving.”

Here's the Farm Bureau's infographic indicating each of the menu items for their Thanksgiving dinner and the average prices they found them when they shopped for them during the first week of November 2025:

Farm Bureau: 2025 Thanksgiving Dinner Menu Items Cost

Although turkeys are much less costly for American consumers, they found both increases and decreases in the prices of several items compared to last year.

Half of the ingredients in the survey declined in price, including dinner rolls and stuffing. Low wheat prices helped bring down the cost of items requiring flour.

Items like fresh vegetables and sweet potatoes increased – a veggie tray is up more than 61% and sweet potatoes are up 37%. Natural disasters partly contributed to the increase. For example, North Carolina, which is the largest grower of the nation’s sweet potatoes, suffered hurricane damage. Additionally, fresh produce prices tend to be highly volatile, and even modest supply-chain disruptions, from weather, labor shortages, transportation delays or regional production setbacks, can trigger sharp, short-term spikes in prices. The continued shortage of farmworkers and rapidly increasing farm wages also played a role in rising produce costs. It’s important to note that fresh vegetables and potatoes are traditionally low-cost items, so an increase of just a few cents can dramatically affect the cost change percentage year-to-year.

Here are the average prices of the Farm Bureau's Thanksgiving dinner menu items with their percentage and dollar changes in cost from 2024 to 2025:

  • 16-pound turkey: $21.50 or $1.34 per pound (down 16.3%, or -$4.17 for the whole turkey)
  • 14-ounces of cubed stuffing mix: $3.71 (down 9%, or -$0.37)
  • 2 frozen pie crusts: $3.37 (down .8%, or -$0.03)
  • Half pint of whipping cream: $1.87 (up 3.2%, or +$0.06)
  • 1 pound of frozen peas: $2.03 (up 17.2%, or +$0.30)
  • 1 dozen dinner rolls: $3.56 (down 14.6%, or -$0.60)
  • Misc. ingredients to prepare the meal: $3.61 (down 4.7%, or -$0.14)
  • 30-ounce can of pumpkin pie mix: $4.16 (up .1%, or +$0.01)
  • 1 gallon of whole milk: $3.73 (up 16.3%, or +$0.52)
  • 3 pounds of sweet potatoes: $4.00 (up 37%, or +$1.07)
  • 1-pound veggie tray (carrots & celery): $1.36 (up 61.3%, or +$0.52)
  • 12-ounce bag of fresh cranberries: $2.28 (down 2.8%, or -$0.07)

Overall, the $55.18 cost of a Thanksgiving dinner in 2025 is $8.87 or about 14% lower than in 2022.

References

Farm Bureau Federation. Cost of Thanksgiving Dinner Declines. [Online article]. 19 November 2025.

Farm Bureau Federation. Cost of Thanksgiving Dinner Declines – Remains Higher Than Pre-Pandemic Levels. [Online article]. 20 November 2024.

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26 November 2025
Close-up of a turkey's head and neck photo by Chandler Cruttenden on Unsplash - https://unsplash.com/photos/close-up-of-a-turkeys-head-and-neck-gtwEKadoOWs

2025 saw the population of U.S. farm-raised turkeys decline. But that's not the only thing about turkeys that shrank during the past year. The average live weight of turkeys has also fallen.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture's initial estimate of the live weight of the turkeys that were raised during 2025 is 32.0 pounds, which is down from 32.8 points in 2024 and is coincidentally back to what the average farm-raised turkey weighed in 2023.

First, let's see how the live weight of farm-raised turkeys in 2025 compares with the averages recorded in previous years. The following interactive chart shows how the size of live turkeys raised on U.S. farms has changed from 1970 through 2025.

Even at 32 pounds, farm-raised turkeys in 2025 are double the average size of wild "heritage" turkeys in the U.S. Virtually all of the increase in the size of farm-raised turkeys has taken place since 1980. Since 2020, the growth of U.S. farm-raised turkeys has stagnated largely because of two factors.

The first is the inflation unleashed by the Biden administration that sent feed prices soaring, making it much more costly for turkey farmers to raise turkeys. The second is bird influenza, in which the culling of turkey flocks to limit its spread has reduced the available supply, leading turkey producers to process smaller birds for market than they ordinarily would to meet consumer demand.

What that all means is that the growth of the average farm-raised turkey has stagnated since 2021, making the period since like the great stagnation of the 1970s. Coincidentally, that era was also defined by high inflation in the U.S. economy.

References

U.S. Department of Agriculture. Turkeys Raised. [PDF Document]. 26 September 2025.

U.S. Department of Agriculture. World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE). U.S. Quarterly Animal Product Production. Nov Proj. Turkey (Ready To Cook Weight, millions of pounds). [PDF Document]. 14 November 2025.

U.S. Department of Agriculture. Meat statistics tables, recent. Table 3 - Livestock and poultry live and dressed weights. [Excel Spreadsheet]. 30 September 2025.

Image credit: Close-up of a turkey's head and neck photo by Chandler Cruttenden on Unsplash.

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25 November 2025
A group of turkeys in a fenced area photo by Heather Gill on Unsplash - https://unsplash.com/photos/a-group-of-chickens-in-a-fenced-in-area-o9vQS5XXaAM

The population of farm-raised turkeys fell in 2025, continuing a decades-long trend of shrinking.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agricultural Statistics Service reported an initial population estimate of 194.5 million, which represents the total production of turkeys on U.S. farms for 2025. The NASS also revised its 2024 population estimate downward, from 205 million to 200 million.

The decline in the population of turkeys has been ongoing since the population of farm-raised turkey's in the U.S. peaked at 302.7 million in 1996. 2025's estimated population of 194.5 million farm-raised turkeys was last previously observed between 1985 and 1986, when the production of turkeys surged from 185.4 to 207.2 million because of increased demand for lean protein during the low-fat diet craze of that era.

The Epoch Times describes the rise and fall of turkey in America and what that says about how much turkey Americans are eating:

Turkey consumption in the United States has followed an arc over the past century, driven by agricultural, technological and health trends.

According to the USDA Economic Research Service, the average person in the United States ate less than three pounds of turkey a year in the 1930s and 1940s. By 1960, that number had doubled, as producers introduced specialized bird breeds that yielded more meat.

Advances in production and the introduction of processed products such as luncheon meats, ground turkey, and deli items drove turkey’s popularity in the 1980s. Marketing campaigns promoted the bird as a healthy, low-fat meat.

Annual turkey consumption rose from an average of about 10 pounds per person in 1980, to a peak of 18 pounds per person in 1996.

Since that time, however, consumers have been steadily eating less turkey. In 2025, average turkey consumption is projected to be just over 13 pounds per person, a nearly 40 year low.

In total, the USDA projects 4.5 billion pounds of turkey will be eaten in 2025—the lowest amount since 1990, according to the latest World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) report.

The USDA estimates 195 million turkeys were raised in 2025, the lowest number in 40 years. This is the second consecutive annual decline, with production falling about 3 percent from 2024 and around 11 percent from 2023.

The following interactive chart presents the number of farm-raised turkeys for each year from 1970 through 2025:

Americans will eat about 30 million of those 194.5 million farm-raised turkeys during the 2025 Thanksgiving holiday.

On a final note, our interactive chart doesn't account for the population of wild turkeys in the United States. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service indicates that portion of the total population of turkeys in the U.S. was around 6.5 million in 2024. Without anything to suggest any major changes in the wild population has occurred, we assume this estimate is still valid. Including the wild population of turkeys with farm-raised turkeys brings the total estimated population of the bird up to 201 million for 2025.

References

U.S. Department of Agriculture National Agricultural Statistics Service. Livestock Historic Data. [Online Database: Survey - Animals & Products - Poultry - Turkeys - Production - Turkeys Production Measured in Head - Total - National - US Total - 1929-2025 - Annual - Year]. Accessed 23 November 2025.

Image credit: A group of turkeys in a fenced area photo by Heather Gill on Unsplash.

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24 November 2025
An editorial cartoon of Federal Reserve officials dressed as professional wrestlers who are fighting about whether to cut interest rates or not. Image generated with Microsoft Copilot Designer.

The S&P 500 (Index: SPX) experienced a lot of intraday volatility in the trading week ending on Friday, 21 November 2025. By the close of the week's trading, the index was down 1.95% from its previous week's close.

Two factors combined to put the market through big swings during the week that was. The AI tech stocks that have helped power the S&P 500 to record highs during 2025 got a big boost from Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) after the close of trading on Wednesday, 19 November 2025, when the company announced its cloud GPU products sold out, affirming the megacap's outlook going into 2026.

The market's positive reaction to that news was tempered on Thursday however, as a number of Federal Reserve officials staked out positions against continuing the Fed's recent rate cuts in December 2025. That information sent stock prices down to their lowest level since 10 September 2025, which was partially reversed on Friday when the Fed's second-highest ranking official signaled a rate cut "in the near term" would be likely.

The response by investors to the prospect a "near term" rate cut is remarkable. The CME Group's FedWatch Tool rose to indicate a 71% probability of a quarter point rate cut on 10 December (2025-Q4), up from just 44% a week ago, with virtually all of that change taking place on Friday, 21 November 2025. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 rose nearly one percent on the day to end the trading week at 6,602.99.

Looking further forward, the FedWatch tool gives better than even odds for additional quarter point rate cuts in 2026, coming on 29 April (2026-Q2), 29 July (2026-Q3), and 9 December (2026-Q4). The potential timing of all these projected rate cuts remains very fluid with substantial changes in expectations from week to week.

For the latest update of the alternative futures chart, we've added a new short-term redzone forecast range to compensate for the echo of historic volatility in stock prices in the dividend futures-based model. The echo effect arises as a result of the model's use of historic stock prices as the base reference points from which its projections of future stock prices are determined. The new redzone forecast range assumes investors will remain focused on the current quarter of 2025-Q4 in setting stock prices during the period it runs.

Alternative Futures - S&P 500 - 2025Q4 - Standard Model (m=-2.0 from 28 Apr 2025) - Snapshot on 21 Nov 2025

Speaking of the echo effect, the chart also shows we'll have another, longer period coming up in which the model's projections will be similarly affected, though for that period, we anticipate the model's projections will undershoot the trajectory of stock prices.

We also likely won't know how investors will reset their forward-looking investment time horizon after the Fed's 10 December 2025 meeting. They will shift their attention to a more distant quarter in the future, but the open question that remains to be answered is which one?

Sorting that out depends on the context of the random onset of new information investors will absorb in the weeks ahead. Until those make themselves known, here are the past week's market moving headlines.

Monday, 17 November 2025
Tuesday, 18 November 2025
Wednesday, 19 November 2025
Thursday, 20 November 2025
Friday, 21 November 2025

The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow tool projection of real GDP growth in the U.S. during the recently ended 2025-Q3 increased from +4.0% to +4.2% as several delayed economic data reports started to come in following the end of the Senate Democrats' shutdown. The BEA's official estimates of GDP for 2025-Q3 will likely be delayed into December 2025 given the upcoming holiday calendar.

With the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday, we're anticipating a low volume of news coming out of the U.S. in the week ahead. That means much of the market-moving news will be coming from outside the U.S., where we anticipate paying a lot of attention to developments in both China and especially Japan.

Image credit: Microsoft Copilot Designer. Prompt: "An editorial cartoon of Federal Reserve officials dressed as professional wrestlers who are fighting about whether to cut interest rates or not".

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21 November 2025
Hands exchanging a gift with a red ribbon photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash - https://unsplash.com/photos/hands-exchanging-a-gift-with-red-ribbon-0X3416CNi4c

It can be very difficult to find a good gift to give the people closest to you. That challenge can become even more difficult if they're the kind of people who really like math. What can you give to them that will excite them and, perhaps most importantly for the most enthusiastic among them, they haven't already gotten for themselves? Or that you haven't gotten them before?

Speaking of which, let's recap the very short list of gift ideas we've previously suggested, in case you've already exhausted those options:

This year, we'll suggest three new options, including two that offer the bonus of being potentially practical. Starting with....

Amazon: Sometimes I Go Off on a Tangent Mug

The "Sometimes I Go Off on a Tangent" Coffee Mug

Coffee mugs are inherently practical, and frankly, much easier to drink from than a Klein bottle. This one features a design than illustrates the mathematical concept of tangents, pairing it with a really bad math pun.

Despite the bad mathematical pun, this 11-ounce ceramic mug is microwave and "dishwasher safe", though handwashing is recommended. Otherwise, it's a fully practical mug.

Many Amazon reviewers mention buying this mug as a gift for their math teachers. However, if you really knew any math teachers, you would know that 11-ounces of a caffeine-laden beverage isn't going to cut it for them. Instead, this is a mug in which they can keep their fancy Hagoromo colored chalk on their classroom desk. Right next to the much larger mug from which they will consume their preferred caffeinated beverages.

Amazon: The Proof Is in the Pudding Bowls

"The Proof Is in the Pudding" Bowls

These are actual pudding bowls which were created and marketed by "The Unemployed Philosophers Guild", who love both bad puns and mathematical proofs. Here's an excerpt of their product description:

  • A set of four ceramic pudding bowls with the proofs to classic theorems of Euclid, Hippasus, Pythagoras, and Gauss. Terrific gift for mathematicians, scientists, students, or any geek on your gift list.
  • We are not going to lie to you: this one is for the mathematikoi-the inner circle of the school of Pythagoras. If you think all math is rational, you are living in a fool's paradise.
  • These bowls are dangerous-so dangerous that one theorem just might have culminated in murder. (Look it up-Hippasus of Metapontum sleeps with the fishes because he couldn't keep his mouth shut about the square root of 2).

They're not kidding when they say these bowls are for the "mathematikoi", which we think of as those people who like math so much they unironically get tattoos of their favorite formulas. If you know that person, you now know what to get them as a gift.

Amazon: Infinite Powers by Steven Strogatz

Infinite Powers: How Calculus Reveals the Secrets of the Universe

This is a good introductory book on the topic of calculus, why and how it was invented, and what people use it for. That said, the best and most engaging parts of the book are the ones where author Steven Strogatz breaks away from the math and has fun with the topic at hand. Here's an example:

All across the world, students are being taught that division by zero is forbidden. They should feel shocked that such a taboo exists. Numbers are supposed to be orderly and well behaved. Math class is a place for logic and reasoning. And yet it's possible to ask simple things of numbers that just don't work or make sense. Dividing by zero is one of them.

The root of the problem is infinity. Dividing by zero summons infinity in much the same way that a Ouija board supposedly summons spirits from another realm. It's risky. Don't go there.

Strogatz is also the host of Quanta Magazine's "The Joy of Why" podcast, the title of which is a riff on his earlier book "The Joy of X: A Guided Tour of Math, from One to Infinity. Infinite Powers is very rare math book that falls in between the binary extremes of "too simple" and "too advanced" levels of knowledge needed to enjoy reading them. As such, this book represents a better-than-average gift idea for the majority of maths enthusiasts you may know.

With these gift ideas in hand for perhaps the most difficult person for whom you need to give a present, you can now move on to shop for more normal people!

Image credit: Hands exchanging a gift with a red ribbon photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash.

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Welcome to the blogosphere's toolchest! Here, unlike other blogs dedicated to analyzing current events, we create easy-to-use, simple tools to do the math related to them so you can get in on the action too! If you would like to learn more about these tools, or if you would like to contribute ideas to develop for this blog, please e-mail us at:

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