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Re: Inflation watch...

By: capt_nemo in ROUND | Recommend this post (0)
Thu, 15 Dec 11 6:36 PM | 38 view(s)
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Msg. 37095 of 45651
(This msg. is a reply to 37090 by Decomposed)

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Agreed DE, The most notable shelf/cooler item I watched was ice cream in those square cartons, They are like half the size now and ONLY on sale are cheaper then they were a few years ago. They make quantity smaller and try to keep the same price, that way they can saY, no inflation......And potatoes here are crazy, and we have mega spud farms here....I am quite the sale/coupon shopper now.........




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Inflation watch...
By: Decomposed
in ROUND
Thu, 15 Dec 11 5:25 PM
Msg. 37090 of 45651

Are you folks holding up well against the price of food? I hope so.

Potatos were $0.60/lb when I moved here six years ago. I thought that was pretty outrageous, but I put it down to coming from California - where groceries are naturally cheap.

It was only two years ago that they surged to $0.90/lb. I remember, because I'd just learned how to make potato salad, and it was frustrating.

Now they're $1.25/lb.

Banquet chicken TV dinners had two pieces of chicken in them a decade ago - and they were priced the same as all the other dinners. About a dollar apiece.

Now they have ONE piece of chicken, are no longer grouped with the other TV dinners, and are 50% more than the other TV dinners.

In California, I regularly bought large frozen pizzas for $3.33 apiece. The one I bought yesterday was $6.00, and that was the best I could do on a per-ounce basis.

I bet it was smaller than the ones I was buying in California, too.

I used to buy frozen French Fries at a warehouse-style grocery store (whose name escapes me), for 19 cents a pound. The best I can do today is 89 cents a pound.

In California, I was getting turkeys at Thanksgiving for FREE - buy spending $25 on other things... and later $100 in groceries. This year, the best I could do was 59 cents/lb when I spent $40.

Movie rentals have been $1.00/night at the discount places for as long as I can remember. But in the last few months, they've climbed to $1.25 at Redbox. Netflix has raised its prices. Most of the video/DVD rental "stores" have gone out of business.

The rate of price inflation on things that really matter is truly horrifying. 



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