Shrinkflation: You're Paying More And Getting Less

Addict2sex

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Shrinkflation: You're Paying More And Getting Less

WEDNESDAY, JUL 19, 2023 - 06:35 PM
Authored by Michael Maharrey via SchiffGold.com,
We are all keenly aware of price inflation. We notice those rising prices every time we go into a store. But the inflation boogeyman is hitting you even harder than you realize.
Not only are you paying more for pretty much everything you buy, you’re getting less.







Literally.

It’s called shrinkflation.

Rising prices don’t just hit consumers. In fact, they impact producers first. As the cost of materials, labor and equipment goes up, companies feel the pinch. Eventually, they pass those costs on to their customers.

But raising prices is bad for business, so sometimes, companies find other ways to cut costs. They shrink packages or simply put less stuff in the same size box. While the price stays the same, you get less product.

Shrinkflation doesn’t show up in the CPI and consumers often don’t even notice, but the effect is the same as rising prices. You ultimately end up with less stuff. It is ninja inflation.

“Downsizing is really a sneaky price increase,” former Massachusetts assistant attorney general Greg Dworsky told NPR during an interview.
“Consumers tend to be price-conscious. But they’re not net-weight conscious. They can tell instantly if they’re used to paying $2.99 for a carton of orange juice and that goes up to $3.19. But if the orange juice container goes from 64 ounces to 59 ounces, they’re probably not going to notice.”
MousePrint.org chronicles shrinkflation. Here are some recent examples.

  • Double rolls of Bounty paper towels have shrunk from 98 select-a-size sheets to just 90. Triple rolls were downsized from 147 select-a-size sheets per roll to 135.
  • The standard 92-ounce bottle of Gain detergent is now 88 ounces.
  • A family-size bags of Double Stuf Oreos now have four fewer cookies in each bag. (Did the family shrink?)
  • The 19.4-ounce bottle was downsized to 18 ounces.
  • A package of Sara Lee blueberry bagels was reduced from five to four bagels as the package weight dropped by 3.3 ounces.
  • Green Giant frozen broccoli and cheese sauce packages were reduced from 10.0 oz. to 8.0 oz. with no change in the advertised number of servings per package.
  • Ice cream companies have generally dropped the standard 56-ounce container to 48 ounces.
  • A tube of Crest Detoxify toothpaste dropped from 4.1 ounces to 3.7 ounces.
  • Kettle potato chips switched from 8.5-oz. bags to 7.5-oz. bags.
  • A package of Ortega taco shells dropped from 5.8 ounces to 4.9 ounces.
We also see shrinkflation in services. Remember full-service gas stations? Now, we pump our own gas, bag our own groceries and manage our own investment portfolios.

Misplaced Blame
Consumers often don’t notice shrinkflation, but when they do, they get angry, and they usually direct their anger at the “greedy” corporations who are charging them the same amount of money for less product. But there is another culprit who generally slinks around unnoticed.

The Federal Reserve.

Price inflation is a symptom of monetary inflation. As the central bank creates money out of thin air and injects it into the economy, prices generally rise. Economist Murray Rothbard noted that since governments have deemed “paper tickets” and computer digits money, “then the government, as dominant money-supplier, becomes free to create money costlessly and at will. As a result, this ‘inflation’ of the money supply destroys the value of the dollar or pound, drives up prices, cripples economic calculation, and hobbles and seriously damages the workings of the market economy.”

Companies are merely responding to their own cost problem when they shrink package sizes. If they didn’t, they would have to raise the price. And that would make you mad too!

When it’s all said and done, you end up paying more and getting less.

Ron Paul summed it up this way.

Congress should also restore a sound monetary policy by auditing, then ending, the Fed, as well as by repealing both legal tender laws and capital gains taxes on precious metals and cryptocurrencies. Ending the era of the welfare-warfare state and fiat currency can lead to a transition to a new era of liberty, peace, prosperity — and full bags of Doritos.”
 
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xix

Time Zone Traveller
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La la land
Tim Horton Breakfast meals.
 

thumper18474

Well-known member
LMAO..for a minute there I thought this thread was about the hobby..actually in some aspects this shkinkflation can be applied here too!
 

Not getting younger

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Jun 29, 2022
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Lol…been going on for years. Boxes of cereal, chips, pretty much anything and everything.

“food” for thought before you blame corporate greed. You all hope to retire some day right?

Probably have $$ in RRSPs, TFSAs ( if you can find two nickels each year) and for the lucky few pensions.

/points to the “investments” forum
/points to how irate people get when their pensions/savings lose $$. When the markets go down…
/points to wanting stock prices to go up and up.

All those companies have executives whose job it is, is profits….they answer to the board of directors, the board answers to shareholders….

I suppose companies could be less focused on profits. But, without those profits…..know what your savings would look like? In other words it’s “not really” corporate greed. It’s shareholder greed.
 
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oil&gas

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Ghawar
Inflation won't be as severe for China and India in the coming years
thanks to cheaper Russian oil.

 

oil&gas

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Ghawar
India’s rice export ban could send decade-high prices spiking even further
JUL 20 2023

India banned the exports of non-basmati white rice with immediate effect late Thursday, the latest in the government’s effort to rein in high food prices.

The Ministry of Consumer Affairs said the ban would help ensure “adequate availability” of non-basmati white rice in India, as well as “allay the rise in prices in the domestic market.”

India is the world’s leading rice exporter, accounting for more than 40% of the global rice trade, as well as the second-largest producer after China.

Analysts told CNBC this week’s ban could send already elevated prices shooting even higher, compounding effects from the country’s September ban on shipments of broken rice.

“Global rice [supplies] would drastically tighten ... since the country is the world’s second top producer of the food staple,” said Eve Barre, ASEAN economist at trade credit insurer Coface.

Barre said Bangladesh and Nepal would be hardest hit by the ban, as both countries are top export destinations.

The ban could also exacerbate food insecurity for countries heavily reliant on rice, agriculture analytics firm Gro Intelligence predicted in a recent report published before the announcement.

“Top destinations for Indian rice include Bangladesh, China, Benin, and Nepal. Other African countries also import a large amount of Indian rice,” Gro Intelligence’s analysts wrote.

According to the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, non-basmati white rice constitutes about 25% of India’s rice exports.

Affected importers may turn to alternative suppliers in the region, like Thailand and Vietnam, DBS Bank senior economist Radhika Rao said.

“In addition to a reduction in global rice supply, panic reactions and speculation on global rice markets would exacerbate the increase in prices,” said Coface’s Barre.

Prices are already hovering at decade highs, in part due to tighter supplies when the staple became an attractive alternative as prices of other major grains surged following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Wheat prices jumped this week after Russia withdrew from the Black Sea grain deal. The agreement had sought to prevent a global food crisis by allowing Ukraine to continue to export.

“Rice inflation has already accelerated from an average 6% year-on-year last year to nearly 12% in June 2023,” DBS’ Rao said.

Rough rice futures
rose 1% higher to stand at $15.8 per hundredweight (ctw) following India’s announcement.

The South Asian nation is wrestling with high vegetable, fruit and grain prices. Prices of tomatoes in India have surged more than 300% in recent weeks due to adverse weather. A Reuters poll predicted the country’s inflation likely hit 4.58% year-on-year on soaring food prices.

Rabobank senior analyst Oscar Tjakra predicted global rice prices will rise further due to India’s share of the global market. Tjakra predicted prices could even surpass second-quarter highs when rough rice hit $18-levels per cwt.

 

K Douglas

Half Man Half Amazing
Jan 5, 2005
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This is real problem, especially here in Canada. Paying more or the same and getting less. This doesn't get factored into the official inflation rate but it should.
 

mark moo

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Dec 26, 2024
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Lol this name sounds like a fetish. But yeah gotta hate it, seems like by 20 years from now we will pay the same price for like 2 chips in a bag
 

sprite09

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Ashley Madison
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