• snownyte@kbin.social
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    8 months ago

    Eggs are again steadily rising in price. Wal-Mart “great value” prices isn’t all that ‘great’ to begin with, with most of it’s products.

    But can we stop calling things inflation? Call it for what it really has been - G-R-E-E-D

      • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Costco is great… But not everything works best when bought in bulk, and not everything freezes well. Eggs for instance, most people probably aren’t going to go through 72 eggs in a reasonable timeframe. But it’s great for shelf stable items and things you use a lot of.

        Yes it is cheaper per unit because you’re buying a larger quantity, but nearly every item is going to be $20+. This also assumes that you can afford the membership cost and the up front budget to be able to start to build that bulk stock, and that you have room for holding that bulk stock at home,

        These are things that many people take for granted with so many more people living paycheck to paycheck now with increases in so many other costs now as well.

      • Fermion@feddit.nl
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        8 months ago

        After hearing so many people singing their praises, I finally got a membership.

        I used it precisely once. Their prices really were not very good on 90% of what I looked at. Plus they really encourage overconsumption.

        Aldi ends up being more convenient and generally cheaper for groceries for me.

        I’m not trying to yuck your yum, I just wanted to express an unimpressed opinion for other fencesitters.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Also look for locally sourced eggs and meat, dairy, etc. You can probably find some small farms that sell direct to consumer.

        I have yet to find one that was not substantially more expensive than any local supermarket.

        • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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          8 months ago

          Large farms have economies of scale the small ones can’t match. I raised four pigs and had to sell them for $5 a pound just to break even, which is a lot more than pork chops at the grocery store.

          Granted, they were an heirloom breed and at least 5x better than the dry pink things most hog farmers raise, but even if I had 40 pigs I don’t think I could match that price.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Considering this is about eggs in supermarkets being too expensive for many people, I don’t know that telling people how to pay even more for eggs is the best advice.

    • circuitfarmer@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Jobs are starting to dry up in some industries because interest rates are so high that larger companies can no longer borrow cheaply to take a chance on side projects. The rates are high to combat this “inflation”, and of course it won’t work, because we aren’t seeing real inflation. We’re just seeing companies charging more because every industry is now an oligarchy. It’s a bit of a death spiral.

    • Scotty_Trees@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I hate to be that guy, but actually it’s not just “greed” this time. There was millions of chickens that had to be culled due to a viral outbreak of Avian flu last season and we are just now seeing the effects of that. Don’t get me wrong greed does play a part, but the major contributing factor this time around for eggs is not greed, but the system rebounding from the outbreak. I know it’s trendy to say greed ruins everything (it can and does), but in this case it helps to have actual context to know what’s going on with the overall picture of things. The more you know, ya know.

      https://www.gro-intelligence.com/insights/us-egg-prices-jump-amid-deadly-surge-in-avian-flu

    • cyd@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Inflation literally means prices going up. Calling it as greed isn’t useful, because greed can lead to both price increases or decreases, depending on the context. For example, firms that are greedy for market share can drive prices down (a phenomenon that American consumers have benefited from greatly, over decades).

      • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        No, inflation means purchasing power decreasing. Prices going up is an effect of that rate but they are not directly tied. Not everything goes up by a flat percentage every month or year.

        The food price increases were never at the rate of inflation. The worst inflation the US saw was 9% in June 2022, but that was just for that month period.the overall rate for 2022 as a whole was 8%. For 2023 the annual inflation rate was back to almost normal, at 3.5%, just above the 3.2% long term inflation rate.

        So even if we assume costs jumped immediately, if a price went up more than 9% it was bullshit.

        • cyd@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Picking out one price rise, and calling it out because it’s higher than the average inflation rate, is silly. Since inflation is the rise in the price level, averaged over all goods, almost by definition there will be some prices rising by more than average (and others less than average).

          In fact, it’s well known that inflation hits very unevenly across different prices in an economy. The 1970s inflationary episode, for example, started with gas prices going up due to the oil embargo, before bleeding through into other prices. There are entire fields of economics dedicated to looking at inflation through different segments of the economy, precisely because price rises can be so uneven.

          The bigger issue is that inflation is a problem of monetary and fiscal policy, which means pointing to greed is totally beside the point. Inflation was quiescent during the 2010s, and it’s not like people and companies were magically non-greedy during that period.