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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This also happened in Brazil, but it happened in a boiling frog manner starting years ago. Year after year they would reduce the size of pretty much all industrialized or packaged foodstuffs by about 6%. I guess this is also what's going to happen to you guys.
 
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.
Yes across the globe dumbshit governments did what Joe Biden's government also did, resulting in record inflation. That everywhere else was just as retarded doesn't get Sniffem off the hook dummy
 
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.
The global market is basically the us one. The US dollar is the defacto global currency. The fed basically runs the show. They're the ones who kept printing money, buying sept through one door and selling it through another. They want to be the only lender in the world. Yellen responds only to the fed.
 
Yes across the globe dumbshit governments did what Joe Biden's government also did, resulting in record inflation. That everywhere else was just as retarded doesn't get Sniffem off the hook dummy
You do realize that Donald Trump was the President who signed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act into law in March of 2020 to the tune of $2.2 Trillion, right?

Jesus Christ, I'm no fan of Joe Biden, but you people are making complete and total retards of yourselves in your zeal to make him look bad.
 
The 10 lb. bag of Reddy Ice I buy every other day or so for my cocktails at the convenience store is now 7 lbs. And price increased to $3.

They're hitting me where it hurts, right in the vodka!
 
packages are shrinking? better import lots of BBC to bring the average up

also governments around the world missed the ball so badly on corona, you could have wiped off a good proportion of the ageing population problem, saving on healthcare and social security costs, making housing more affordable, lowering emissions and freeing up an inheritance tax slush fund to plough into infrastructure and public services


literally all people do is complain about the problems caused by the lack of natural predators to thin the herd, and the second we get one it's all hands to the seppuku knife

basic ecology People
 
Lol this started happening at the tail end of 2020, did they just notice?
It started in the '70s. The old coffee cans full of rusty fishhooks in grandpa's garage are twice as big (voluminous) as the ones from twenty years ago, and those are twice as big as today's.

Inflation hasn't increased much lately. Acknowledging it (gov't and business being trapped into fully "passing it on to the consumer") has.
 
Being poor means getting nickled-and-dimed to death and I do mean that literally. It's very expensive to be poor, for lots of reasons, not the least being that it's often not possible to buy in bulk and get cheaper items by unit.
 
Honestly, an increase in price in processed packaged foods and garbage snacks is mostly a good thing. The amount of food waste (and obesity) caused by the snack/processed food industry is unreal. Going back to 3 square meals a day of staple foods like beans and rice is probably for the best.

Yeah, it sucks to have to usher out the age of excess but we might all be better for it. It was unbelievable that ready to eat foods were somehow cheaper than their base ingredients, after being shipped halfway across the world.
 
nigga i eat cold meat sandwiches. Not only did the 5$ package are now up to 6$ those bitches also shrunk. My cheese slice were 24 slices, now its 22 slices and im sure they shrunk those bitches size too. Pack of bacon used to be around 3$ now its regular prices is around 5-6$ and its fucking thin as shit bacon. Fuck everyone involved. Not even talking about the price of beef, chicken and porc all going up which is all staple food. but hey bag of chips and soda is still super cheap but that unhealthy food.
 
I dont know about all of you but my families grocery bill has risen significantly.
During Covid I was buying extra food to stock away in case I needed to quarantine. Probably about 8-10 days worth instead of my usual 7.

I’m not doing that as much now (though I did just buy 4 things of oatmeal, jic), and my bill now is higher than it was then. I noticed that the little Mio drink flavor things have gone up nearly $1.00 since January. Cream cheese and butter have gone up a lot (if you can even find them) and the cream cheese also shrunk.
 
I'm surprised there's so many people struggling with food in the US. In here it hasn't been much of an issue for a while even though we have been suffering from constant inflation.
 
“I’m not saying they’re profiteering, but it smells like it,”

I'll say it: They are profiteering.
lol and that shit never goes away.

I mean people have been noticing this shit for a while. And since globo mega corps/oligarchs own pretty much everything, you cant choose another guy. Theyre all colluding to do it. This is a part of inflation and has been for a while, it is kind of unsustainable, cutting from the bottom to drive wealth to the top to 'trickle down', its kind of unsustainable, its why WalMart and Target took that hit in their reports to a degree, I think. Theyre the only game in town for some places, and the main economic driver, so its so masturbatory if any part of the "workers get money/welfare/whatever->spend it at walmart" shifts, walmart loses out when the little guy cant afford to buy as much shit at walmart.
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.
I havent seen any place outside of urban or suburban areas that has a co-op type of thing like that. Rural areas youre reliant on Amazon or a car and planning for super huge grocery trips at like 1 store or Walmart. I kind of get why, people will fuck with the scales, mislabel whatever (2 1/2 finger discount), sneak 'snacks', theyre probably annoying to stock--so theyre all in yuppie areas.
But I understand the appeal. I was lucky to live near a metro area and found a small business that does wholesale coffee by the pound and while it isnt great, its significantly cheaper. Most places are 12 oz beans for like 14 or 15 bucks, this one used to be 16 oz for 9, now 11 but still a really good deal for beans. And theyre talking about Folgers doing fucky shit with it's weight, so the bulk bin places youre always paying price per pound so it is a bit more upfront and kind of fair.
 
How exactly is the $2.2 Trillion not the Fed printing money? It was exactly the Fed printing money. Have you forgotten the $1200 stimulus checks? All Trump's doing. After all, he signed the bill!
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The Fed printed 16 trillion dollars in 2020 and another 2 trillion in 2021. The total stimulant checks totaled around 300-400b because not every single person in the country was eligible for them. The inflation crisis can be laid directly at the Fed's feet. A single 1 or 2 trillion dollar package out of Congress is a drop in the bucket on any year and the checks to common people were probably the best use case the government could do considering it was their mandate that prevented people from working.
 
For a second I thought by the title that this was a CatParty article about cock and balls and the effects of Asian immigration... but no it's just run of the mill depressing inflation news, thanks Joe.
 
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