I’m pretty sick of this “we had to jack up prices due to inflation! Oh, also we just made record profits” bullshit as well. It’s price gouging, squeezing everything they can out of consumers, and that’s it.
It definitely is strange to see both sides of the coin at the same time
Liqour bottles that have been traditionally 750ml are quietly moving to 700ml, while prices have increased.
I noticed that with Jack Daniels a few weeks ago. It hasn't affected my rum or vodka of choice yet though.
You should consider stopping drinking. One of the best decisions I've ever made in my life.
Just for that I'm going to drink even more now
You're wrong if you think I care about you. The logic is sound advice is real. Take it or leave it.
More life advice plz
It makes me freak out about the inefficiencies too. We need to be reducing packaging, reducing logistics, reducing waste, and shrinkflation increases all these things. Capitalism is so single-mindedly awful I want to scream
I wish stores would consistently advertise unit price, like the cost per oz/ml/g. My local store does a pretty good job most of the time, but sometimes they'll have different units listed for competing products, which makes it so much more difficult to compare.
I have a feel for the prices for most of our common purchases, and I try to remember them in terms of unit price instead of package price (e.g. a decent sale on granola in my area is ~$0.20/oz, fancy granola is more like $0.30/oz).
Does anyone have a good app for tracking this?
I wish stores would consistently advertise unit price, like the cost per oz/ml/g.
I really only shop for food based on unit price, but sometimes there's no consistency with the unit of measurement among different stores or even the same store!
And some stores will put items on sale with a unit price, but you don't know if the unit price is the sale amount or the regular price...
It's like stores either don't want you to spend money there, or they do their best to confuse the hell out of people.
I really only shop for food based on unit price, but sometimes there’s no consistency with the unit of measurement among different stores or even the same store!
Yup. Costco is usually pretty good about this, but I was buying something where they had $/oz and $/lb for a similar product, and other products have $/ea if they happen to be individually packaged. I still find I need to calculate it, which is really annoying.
I don't know how Canada is, but I could see it being even more confusing if mixing metric and imperial units (e.g. for US imports).
So yeah, it's incredibly annoying for those of us who care about cost per weight/volume instead of cost per package.
I don’t know how Canada is, but I could see it being even more confusing if mixing metric and imperial units (e.g. for US imports).
Oh, it can get frustrating. For example, potatoes by the bag are often listed as price per 100 g, while potatoes sold individually are price per lb or kg, if you are lucky.
A tray of baking potatoes is priced "per tray" and not per weight of the potatoes. "Small white potatoes" are listed in price per 100ml on the same website... LOL
And that's all stuff listed on websites. Go into a store and you're lucky to even have a unit price listed. Shopping has become either guesswork or based purely on experience.
Ew.
I'm fortunate that the stores I shop at display price per weight or volume for pretty much everything, but it varies a bit product to product in terms of what units they use.
Surely this isn't a hard problem to solve, especially in Canada where you can just standardize on metric. Comparing price per 100g and kg is easy, just move the decimal place one. Comparing price per oz and lb is difficult, since you need to divide/multiply by 16, and that's not easy to do with mental math.
Part of me thinks it's malicious, but perhaps the simpler explanation is that these companies just don't care.
Comparing price per 100g and kg is easy, just move the decimal place one.
Yeah, I don't mind that too much. Amazon uses per KG and Walmart tends to use per 100g on things like cereal, so it's an easy conversion.
It does help to shop at the same store(s), since you kind of know what things should be, even before unit prices come into play. That is, assuming you aren't caught off by shrinkflation, then you need to also remember the size/weight of an item to know if it's a good deal based on price alone.
This is why 99% of my grocery shopping is done online, building a list first, rather than on-the-fly inside of store. Once I've done my comparison shopping and built a list, I go to shop or set aside the order for pick-up.
I would order online, but the stores I prefer to shop at either charge extra for online orders (e.g. Costco), or generally don't have the best prices (e.g. local grocery). I wish I could easily comparison shop at Costco vs other stores, but that's just not practical since Costco charges more for online orders even before adding in the delivery charge.
So I'm left to memorizing the per-unit prices of things I order frequently.
Costco charges more for online orders even before adding in the delivery charge.
That's super frustrating! I've had that happen a few times (Not with Costco) and I'm either forced to leave the store empty-handed or pay more than I expected.
And never mind delivery charge, places around here charge you for picking the stuff up! Unless you “subscribe” to their pick-up/delivery plan. What in the actual hell???
Ikr? And it's not just groceries, movie theaters also charge on online ticket ordering fee, so we end up driving the 2-ish miles to use their kiosk (basically the same thing) to avoid the stupid fee. In fact, we go to movie theaters less because of it.
I know some people will just pay it, but I'm not willing to, and it saddens me that it's probably more lucrative to do these anti-consumer things.
They don't want you making economically informed decisions. Rational decisions are less profitable. They want emotional decisions so they can sneakily charge more.
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