Says the person who's clearly never taken economics nor paid any attention to the last few years. We've had something called significant inflation. Which means everything, including record profits themselves, goes up. I assume even you can figure out how it's easy to have record profits when the value of the money declines while cost of goods and services increases noticeably. Which is why a million today isn't a million 20 years ago. |
This means that more Americans have to learn how to cook, which isn't happening, because of a million different reasons. |
| I like Kerry butter, but it's $9 at Harris Teeter, so decided to give it up. Then I saw it in Trader Joes for $4.49 and bought it. Who is paying $9 for it? |
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Varying factors. I'm 69 years old and last night was reminiscing with a friend about buying cheese for 50 cents a pound when we were in college. Over my adult lifetime I've experienced normal inflation with upward creep and also the sudden leaps. Eventually you readjust your sense of what's the "normal" price for anything, but I have yet to reconcile myself to oranges and grapefruit being sold by the piece instead of by the pound (I think maybe 5 years ago or so?). Besides the package shrinkage (probably showing my age just because ice cream in half gallon cartons was what I was used to until the jump in fuel prices during the Gulf War).
I was passing the grocery store section that has cream cheese and just happened to notice (I don't buy it) that those tubs of whipped cream cheese, I think only 8 ounces, were marked around $8 a tub. Some of the big leaps in recent years have been because of: bird flu, which shot eggs up to crazy prices until fairly recently, which means processed items that contain them got higher. fuel costs labor shortages some months ago dairy farmers weree dumping milk because of low prices, but store prices were higher than ever |
+1. Packaged foods are expensive, but so are fruits and vegetables. I stay home and cook dinner 5 nights a week. It’s not cheap. Cheaper than eating out, yes, but not cheap. 1 lb of strawberries is $5 ($4 on sale). I can usually get two 2 liter bottles of soda for $5. A bottle of orange juice (I forget the size—probably 20 oz) is almost $5 and rarely on sale. It’s all expensive. |
| That's not been my recent experience. My weekly grocery bill has been coming down a little bit over the last few months. |
+1 prices are the same, but the discounts are getting better |
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Certain categories are crazy high and sale prices are only 30 cents off.
$10 for 6-pack of Budweiser No crackers for less than $4-5-6, cookies too Berries Lettuce Hamburger patties Store baked bread Gourmet cheese Deli roast beef Chips/pretzels I think the psychology is that people are addicted to easy/convenient/prepared and addicts aren’t price sensitive — look what the pay for packs of cigarettes. |
We were asked to "just bring sodas" to a recent family gathering. They specified Diet Coke, Regular Coke and "something without caffeine". We brought fizzy water. Period. I'm not paying that much for a case of chemicals. |
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+10000 plus more energy |
| Replace the soda with broccoli. Price of broccoli hasn’t increased. Less cavities and glucose spikes, thank me later |
| You have to use multiple stores now, if possible. We use Publix (BOGOs), Aldi's, and Walmart. |
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It’s so funny you all mention soda. I used to drink a can of diet Mountain Dew a day. It was my guilty pleasure. You could get a 12 pack for $3-$4 on sale or if you bought 3 or something… in 2017 I stopped drinking it completely.
Last week I was gonna grab a 12 pack for old time sake and it was $12 at Target!! Blew my mind. I put it back. |
You went to a party and were asked to bring a specific drink and you didn’t? Rude. Even if they were priced more than you wanted. |