BURN THE WITCH!Yea we picked up a pack of Brussel sprouts, I'll stir fry those with some bacon on Christmas day.
BURN THE WITCH!Yea we picked up a pack of Brussel sprouts, I'll stir fry those with some bacon on Christmas day.
crazy!Are people actually buying this stuff or is it being trashed and then they up the prices again to cover the cost of their greed?Was looking at some of the Christmas deserts in Sainsbury’s yesterday, a “golden” profiterole bowl trifle, £15crazy!
A mass produced standard trifle that’s on sale all year will be cheap because it’s almost entirely done with automated machines.Was looking at some of the Christmas deserts in Sainsbury’s yesterday, a “golden” profiterole bowl trifle, £15crazy!
A mass produced standard trifle that’s on sale all year will be cheap because it’s almost entirely done with automated machines.
The kinds of deserts highlighted above are very labour intensive to make compared to a standard trifle and labour is…. expensive (you know because British people like proper wages).
Go to a proper patisserie where it will be fully hand made and check the prices for something similar, £15 will be very cheap by comparison.
Profiterole's are £8 too they were £6 last year as we bought the same item thought they were expensive last year. Also noticed their items in Xmas packaging are more expensive than those not. Just as an example single Sainsburys Chocolate Pudding was £1.25 same single Sainsburys Chocolate pudding but in Xmas packaging was £1.75!I know, it’s just first look, it seems expensive, but then it likely serves a lot of people.
I think they did this trifle last year, can’t remember the price now, I’m sure it wasn’t anywhere near £15 though.
A 30% + increase in one year is pure greed.Profiterole's are £8 too they were £6
Not had any mcd for years at this point, but from what I seen on videos and such they seem to have gone downhill a lot, lots of hygiene issues since started doing deliveries, and yeah shrinkflation combined with inflation.I haven't had a McMuffin in years. Had one this morning. Surly they are smaller? Felt like I had to pinch it to pick it up!
No need to make a word up for that, it's already covered by 2. Shrinkflation - "Shrinkflation is a sneaky inflation tactic where companies reduce the size, quantity, or quality of a product while keeping its price the same, making consumers pay more for less without an obvious price hike."3. Skimpflation - recipe changed
That falls under the classic "You are the product"4. Dataflation (new term?) - data added to price
En****tification covers everything elseover to you
just noticed this with brunch bars, last time i purchased some there were x5 bars for around £1 last july ish, now they are x4 bars for £1.50What used to be 6 pack of cereal bars, now 4 pack with a 10p reduction in price (which no doubt will go up before long)... 5 and 6 packs of other brunch and energy bars, etc. also gone down to 4 while keeping the old price - kind of defeats the point of these multipacks. Several of the toiletries I buy have reduced from like 200ml to 175ml or 150ml while at the same price recently...
Not shrinkflation but the chocolate I occasionally buy has increased in price by more than double...
Not that I can't afford it but some of this stuff I think I'll just go without.
not buying them again thenjust noticed this with brunch bars, last time i purchased some there were x5 bars for around £1 last july ish, now they are x4 bars for £1.50not buying them again then