Sainsbury’s milk, £1.15p to £1.30p
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https://www.walesonline.co.uk/whats-...pping-21824769
I've been doing my weekly shop at Aldi's lately and I'd say the same sort of thing definitely applies there.
Sainsbury’s milk, £1.15p to £1.30p
Quite an interesting article that is. No question inflation is rising but I think competition will keep a lid on it. Also, so dependent on weather for specific products.
Starting from an insanely low base too. A loaf of bread in Lidl may cost 50p. Someone on even a low wage may only need to work 3-4 minutes to pay for that. At various points in history people may have worked 3-4 hours for the same loaf, and in some cases globally, 3-4 days.
You can predict here what will be more expensive going forward:
https://tradingeconomics.com/commodities
Porrdige, Coffee, Sugar etc..
The article says the price of a beef joint had gone down by £1. That's the price they paid, not the price per kg, which has gone down £2.50.
Unless they compare like for like then there's no point in making a comparison.
I’d agree that the price of some food has been very cheap for a long time. Tony mentions milk, I can remember there being a fuss about milk a year or two ago when dairy farmers were saying they barely made a profit with the prices charged by the bigger supermarkets. Fresh veg is so cheap as well, but the trend generally is definitely upwards.
How much of that is seasonal is hard to tell, I like pink lady apples and their price has varied wildly in recent months - I’ve paid as little as £1.49 for a pack of six within the last six months, on Monday, they were £2.69.
Online shopping is even worse.They catch you always.I tried to buy 1/2 a pound of butter at morrisons on line and try as I might I couldn't get morrisons own brand which is normally about 1.50.cheapest I can get is was 2.50.
Its everywhere
Good morning from #Germany, where inflation has increased by >4%, highest since Dec1993.mainly driven by energy and food prices. Marked price increases were recorded for heating oil (+76,5%) & motor fuels (+28.4%). Prices of natural gas (+5.7%) and electricity (+2.0%) rose, too
Sorry if this is straying off the point.
In Prague for the football. Eat in TGI ordered 2x burger meals with 1 side and 1 desert with 4 beers - converted to £30 paid cash.
Thought to myself we had the exact same meal in TGI Cardiff in June - checked my online banking and that was £60.
Jam £2.10 in Morrison’s.
Nice jams in Lidl full fruit ones £1.10 .
Theirr version of Lurpack spreadable butter £1.69.
Malted loaf bread 95p.
Welsh X Strong Cheddar £1.79
Filtered 4 pints semi skimmed milk £1.10.
Washing Detergent £1.76
Very Large washing up liquid 89p.
They are still way cheaper than most and products are very good value .
It's everywhere:
Inflation in the United States has accelerated more rapidly than expected, driven up by rising food prices.
America’s headline consumer prices index increased by 0.4 per cent last month. On an annual basis, it hit 5.4 per cent, returning the index to levels last recorded in the summer, which themselves were the highest in more than a decade.
Grocery prices rose by 1.2 per cent in September and there is no sign of the pressure on consumers easing soon amid a sharp escalation in energy costs.