Anonymous wrote:Also, most preppers stockpile mostly long shelf stable/life foods, as in 5-10 years, which rules out about 95% of grocery store foods. They typically have some short shelf life foods that they rotate into their cooking as they approach expiration and then replace - like pasta sauces.
Anonymous wrote:If you think hoarding doesn't cause shortages/inflation then please explain toilet-paper-gate in early pandemic
Anonymous wrote:If you think hoarding doesn't cause shortages/inflation then please explain toilet-paper-gate in early pandemic
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even without a serious food shortage, she has dodged the inflation bullet by socking away food a few months ago. Good for her.
Actually stockpiling causes inflation because it artificially concentrates purchases that would have been spread out over months. Thanks a lot grandma.
This is why inflation is a runaway train. People see a little bit of inflation and then they panic buy and cause an inflationary spriral.
You really think buying a case of chickpeas is going to cause the price of chickpeas to go up? This is is not why inflation is a runaway train -- it's because everyone got their stimulus checks and suddenly had money to spend.
You sound way more high strung and hysterical than someone stocking up on beans and rice.
Thanks for the insults. This is basic economics. Supply/demand. Google it. This concept is fundamental to the understanding of inflation.
Again, do you REALLY think someone buying a case of chickpeas causes inflation? If several companies all bought up all the chick peas available, then yes, basic economics means the price of chick peas would rise.
Someone stocking their pantry -- even 1,000 people stocking their pantry -- is not responsible for inflation. So ridiculous.
Yes. REALLY. 1000 people is a bit of an undercount, no? And you do realize that these same people are buying many many items months in advance. Like cars for example. Seriously, spend some energy educating yourself rather than arguing with random internet guy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even without a serious food shortage, she has dodged the inflation bullet by socking away food a few months ago. Good for her.
Actually stockpiling causes inflation because it artificially concentrates purchases that would have been spread out over months. Thanks a lot grandma.
This is why inflation is a runaway train. People see a little bit of inflation and then they panic buy and cause an inflationary spriral.
You really think buying a case of chickpeas is going to cause the price of chickpeas to go up? This is is not why inflation is a runaway train -- it's because everyone got their stimulus checks and suddenly had money to spend.
You sound way more high strung and hysterical than someone stocking up on beans and rice.
Thanks for the insults. This is basic economics. Supply/demand. Google it. This concept is fundamental to the understanding of inflation.
Again, do you REALLY think someone buying a case of chickpeas causes inflation? If several companies all bought up all the chick peas available, then yes, basic economics means the price of chick peas would rise.
Someone stocking their pantry -- even 1,000 people stocking their pantry -- is not responsible for inflation. So ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even without a serious food shortage, she has dodged the inflation bullet by socking away food a few months ago. Good for her.
Actually stockpiling causes inflation because it artificially concentrates purchases that would have been spread out over months. Thanks a lot grandma.
This is why inflation is a runaway train. People see a little bit of inflation and then they panic buy and cause an inflationary spriral.
You really think buying a case of chickpeas is going to cause the price of chickpeas to go up? This is is not why inflation is a runaway train -- it's because everyone got their stimulus checks and suddenly had money to spend.
You sound way more high strung and hysterical than someone stocking up on beans and rice.
Thanks for the insults. This is basic economics. Supply/demand. Google it. This concept is fundamental to the understanding of inflation.
Anonymous wrote:6-12 months ago, people made fun of me for buying dry milk and egg replacers. One poster kept harping and telling me to stop posting and asked if I was advertising for egg replacers. Really hope she’s enjoying her $7 grass fed free range organic egg prices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even without a serious food shortage, she has dodged the inflation bullet by socking away food a few months ago. Good for her.
Actually stockpiling causes inflation because it artificially concentrates purchases that would have been spread out over months. Thanks a lot grandma.
This is why inflation is a runaway train. People see a little bit of inflation and then they panic buy and cause an inflationary spriral.
You really think buying a case of chickpeas is going to cause the price of chickpeas to go up? This is is not why inflation is a runaway train -- it's because everyone got their stimulus checks and suddenly had money to spend.
You sound way more high strung and hysterical than someone stocking up on beans and rice.
Anonymous wrote:I am Indian American. I am not prepping for any food shortage, hike in food price etc because culturally, we always have a fully stocked pantry of shelf stable raw materials because most of us cook from scratch. We all will have rice, wheat flour, chickpeas flour, semolina, white flour, barley flour, millet flour, quinoa, dried beans and lentils (several kind), pickles, a hundred different whole spices, spice blends, tea, coffee, condensed milk, tomato paste, tomato sauce, olive oil, mustard oil, ghee, sesame oil, vinegar, sugar, jaggery, raw nuts, raisins, dried fruits etc. And we can feed the family for around 8-9 months easily.
We also keep a whole lot of condiments and ingredients of other cuisines because if you can master Indian cooking (which is sort of complicated and long drawn) then other cuisines are not that hard - Italian, Chinese, Thai, Mexican, American - these are staples. And then we have multiple fridges and freezers because an Indian household and socializing pretty much revolves around food, food, food.