No, you're not going crazy - package sizes are shrinking

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Article: https://longisland.news12.com/no-youre-not-going-crazy-package-sizes-are-shrinking
Archive: https://archive.ph/F14C4
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It’s the inflation you’re not supposed to see.

From toilet paper to yogurt and coffee to corn chips, manufacturers are quietly shrinking package sizes without lowering prices. It’s dubbed “shrinkflation,” and it’s accelerating worldwide.

In the U.S., a small box of Kleenex now has 60 tissues; a few months ago, it had 65. Chobani Flips yogurts have shrunk from 5.3 ounces to 4.5 ounces. In the U.K., Nestle slimmed down its Nescafe Azera Americano coffee tins from 100 grams to 90 grams. In India, a bar of Vim dish soap has shrunk from 155 grams to 135 grams.
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Shrinkflation isn’t new, experts say. But it proliferates in times of high inflation as companies grapple with rising costs for ingredients, packaging, labor and transportation. Global consumer price inflation was up an estimated 7% in May, a pace that will likely continue through September, according to S&P Global.

“It comes in waves. We happen to be in a tidal wave at the moment because of inflation,” said Edgar Dworsky, a consumer advocate and former assistant attorney general in Massachusetts who has documented shrinkflation on his Consumer World website for decades.

Dworsky began noticing smaller boxes in the cereal aisle last fall, and shrinkflation has ballooned from there. He can cite dozens of examples, from Cottonelle Ultra Clean Care toilet paper, which has shrunk from 340 sheets per roll to 312, to Folgers coffee, which downsized its 51-ounce container to 43.5 ounces but still says it will make up to 400 cups. (Folgers says it’s using a new technology that results in lighter-weight beans.)

Dworsky said shrinkflation appeals to manufacturers because they know customers will notice price increases but won’t keep track of net weights or small details, like the number of sheets on a roll of toilet paper. Companies can also employ tricks to draw attention away from downsizing, like marking smaller packages with bright new labels that draw shoppers’ eyes.
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Likewise, Kimberly-Clark - which makes both Cottonelle and Kleenex - didn’t respond to requests for comment on the reduced package sizes. Proctor & Gamble Co. didn’t respond when asked about Pantene Pro-V Curl Perfection conditioner, which downsized from 12 fluid ounces to 10.4 fluid ounces but still costs $3.99.

Earth’s Best Organic Sunny Day Snack Bars went from eight bars per box to seven, but the price listed at multiple stores remains $3.69. Hain Celestial Group, the brand’s owner, didn’t respond to an email seeking comment.

Some companies are straightforward about the changes. In Japan, snack maker Calbee Inc. announced 10% weight reductions - and 10% price increases - for many of its products in May, including veggie chips and crispy edamame. The company blamed a sharp rise in the cost of raw materials.

Domino’s Pizza announced in January it was shrinking the size of its 10-piece chicken wings to eight pieces for the same $7.99 carryout price. Domino’s cited the rising cost of chicken.

In India, “down-switching” - another term for shrinkflation - is mostly done in rural areas, where people are poorer and more price sensitive, said Byas Anand, head of corporate communications for Dabur India, a consumer care and food business. In cities, companies simply jack up prices.

“My company has been doing it openly for ages,” Anand said.

Some customers who have noticed the downsizing are sharing examples on social media. Others say shrinkflation is causing them to change their shopping habits.

Alex Aspacher does a lot of the grocery shopping and meal planning for his family of four in Haskins, Ohio. He noticed when the one-pound package of sliced Swiss cheese he used to buy shrank to 12 ounces but kept its $9.99 price tag. Now, he hunts for deals or buys a block of cheese and slices it himself.

Aspacher said he knew prices would rise when he started reading about higher wages for grocery workers. But the speed of the change - and the shrinking packages - have surprised him.

“I was prepared for it to a degree, but there hasn’t been a limit to it so far,” Aspacher said. “I hope we find that ceiling pretty soon.”

Sometimes the trend can reverse. As inflation eases, competition might force manufacturers to lower their prices or reintroduce larger packages. But Dworsky says once a product has gotten smaller, it often stays that way.

“Upsizing is kind of rare,” he said.

Hitendra Chaturvedi, a professor of supply chain management at Arizona State University’s W.P. Carey School of Business, said he has no doubt many companies are struggling with labor shortages and higher raw material costs.

But in some cases, companies’ profits - or sales minus the cost of doing business - are also increasing exponentially, and Chaturvedi finds that troubling.

He points to Mondelez International, which took some heat this spring for shrinking the size of its Cadbury Dairy Milk bar in the U.K. without lowering the price. The company’s operating income climbed 21% in 2021, but fell 15% in the first quarter as cost pressures grew. By comparison, PepsiCo’s operating profit climbed 11% in 2021 and 128% in the first quarter.

“I’m not saying they’re profiteering, but it smells like it,” Chaturvedi said. “Are we using supply constraints as a weapon to make more money?”
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“I’m not saying they’re profiteering, but it smells like it,”

I'll say it: They are profiteering.
 
Forget chemicals in the water turning the frogs gay; check the water temperature.
 
I am a total autist at the store. I do all the grocery shopping for the family and each trip usually takes at least an hour. I don't have any real brand loyalty so I am constantly comparing weights on everything and shrinkflation has been happening way more. Sometimes when a new package is introduced its put right next to the old packaging and you can totally tell the new one is smaller. Most recent example of this is a block of cheese I picked up, the newer packaging is 7oz, older was 8oz.

I dont know about all of you but my families grocery bill has risen significantly. We have been eating a lot more dishes with pasta, beans or rice in them to offset, as those items are still relatively cheap. Hopefully theres no Kiwis struggling with food, but if you are I recommend a guy like The Wolfe Pit for some recipe ideas on how to eat cheap.
 
Ctrl+F: Biden
Ctrl+F: Yellen

Cannot seem to find either of those names in this article. Would not want to accurately hang blame I guess.

No it is just those evil corporations who are getting their raw materials for free and trying to rip off the workin' man!

Better nationalize the shampoo industry and put big tissue in their place as well!
 
I am a total autist at the store. I do all the grocery shopping for the family and each trip usually takes at least an hour. I don't have any real brand loyalty so I am constantly comparing weights on everything and shrinkflation has been happening way more. Sometimes when a new package is introduced its put right next to the old packaging and you can totally tell the new one is smaller. Most recent example of this is a block of cheese I picked up, the newer packaging is 7oz, older was 8oz.
12 oz spaghetti
 
Dworsky said shrinkflation appeals to manufacturers because they know customers will notice price increases but won’t keep track of net weights or small details, like the number of sheets on a roll of toilet paper. Companies can also employ tricks to draw attention away from downsizing, like marking smaller packages with bright new labels that draw shoppers’ eyes.

No. We notice. Then I stop buying certain things because they are no longer worth the money due to the size.
 
Lol this started happening at the tail end of 2020, did they just notice?
 
Sometimes the same brands of breakfast cereal will have 3 or 4 different sizes, all at different unit prices. The high-margin ones (low elasticity - big sugary brands on the lower shelves - think "MOM I WANT THIS ONE") have the most egregious examples. I've seen boxes with massive frontage, but only a few cm deep and holding like 300g, obviously to make you think it's a big box until you take it off the shelf.

I too have had autism about calculating prices per 100g since I was small, so I try to refuse any cereal above 80 cents / 100g. But these days, that mostly means just not buying any. It's probably healthier.
 
Ctrl+F: Biden
Ctrl+F: Yellen

Cannot seem to find either of those names in this article. Would not want to accurately hang blame I guess.

No it is just those evil corporations who are getting their raw materials for free and trying to rip off the workin' man!

Better nationalize the shampoo industry and put big tissue in their place as well!
Its Trumps fault. Covid is still affecting our everyday lives. Its the tax for dealing with Putin.
 
My package hasn't shrunk at all. Ladies.

I mostly shop at a place that has a great bulk foods section and get most of my staples there (I recommend everyone do so), so I haven't noticed smaller packaging that much. I have noticed some of those per-pound prices go up, though.
 
One of the most absurd examples of this I've seen in the stores is cereal and snack cracker boxes. They have the same width and height so they take up the same space, but have very little depth. It makes for almost comically thin boxes if you remember what they looked like 20 years ago.
 
we have no choice
*cuts employee wages*
there was nothing we can do
*make employees work more*
completely unavoidable
*gives self 400% raise*
where can we get more money?
 
but if you are I recommend a guy like The Wolfe Pit for some recipe ideas on how to eat cheap.
He's cool. I'd also put Depression Cooking and "If you won't work you shouldn't eat" on the recommendation list.

The former is an old lady now dead sharing her recipes from the great depression, the second doesn't actually teach you how to cook but he tries to teach you the mindset you should have going grocery shopping.

YouTube also frequently recommends me Atomic Shrimp but I would not recommend them as an educational resource. Their challenges are interesting I suppose, but I feel that all the prep time and scavenging make them more of a thought experiment than a sustainable way of life, assuming you don't live on gibs. I've always felt like the challenges are like starving college students, to be honest.

Sure you might not have the freedom to eat what you want when you want, but you aren't actually poor or starving. This is a short term challenge, and college students get breaks in the form of events bribing them for attendance and holidays back home.

They larp as poors during the school year but they have reprieves that no real poor person has, and they're literally in school so they can earn more money (which buys nicer food) in the future. Then daring to compare themselves to actual poors is an insult, no matter how much ramen they eat.

Atomic Shrimp isn't as bad because he isn't crying for sympathy oh woe is me over it all, but he's still got the same flaw where it's really meant to be a short term diet and you aren't expected to live like that with no end in sight.
 
I have really noticed this BS with toothpaste over the last decade.

Toothpaste tubes have shrinked a ton. They put it in the same size cardboard as if you wouldn't notice, but you notice.

By 2030, regular toothpaste tubes will be .1 oz bigger than travel sized.
 
Cannot seem to find either of those names in this article. Would not want to accurately hang blame I guess.
Look dude, I hate Biden and would be as happy as the next guy to see a building fall on him and his entire staff, but this bullshit has been happening since the early 1990s at least. This is not just a Current Year issue.
 
Ctrl+F: Biden
Ctrl+F: Yellen

Cannot seem to find either of those names in this article. Would not want to accurately hang blame I guess.

No it is just those evil corporations who are getting their raw materials for free and trying to rip off the workin' man!

Better nationalize the shampoo industry and put big tissue in their place as well!
Record inflation is happening across the entire globe. Not everything that happens is Joe Biden or the Fed's fault, you absolute retard. Also, Janet Yellen hasn't been the Federal Reserve Chair for four fucking years.
 
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