Consumers are now ‘hunkering down’ rather than ‘trading down’ on groceries, Conagra says
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/consumers-are-now-hunkering-down-rather-than-trading-down-on-groceries-conagra-says-9944d210Open linkView original on lemmy.world
Blind tone deaf MBA piece of shit
Cheap food is no longer cheap, Mr. Giant Food Conglomerate CEO smart guy. Even fast food is the price of a sit down meal at a restaurant just three years ago. I've been cutting all inessential food purchases and leaning into staples. I'm a former chef, it's easy for me to plan cheap high-quality meals for my family but I imagine most people don't have the skillset to make it work, or the time, or enthusiasm.
"It can't be us" is the refrain of the willfully ignorant. No introspection whatsoever about food inflation and shrinkflation.
Or the household size. The smaller the household the less efficient cooking with fresh ingredients becomes.
Or even the equipment. Some people are stuck with a hot plate and a tiny minifridge.
I spent $57 on 10 items earlier today. 9 staples and one small glass bottle of Coke. I even went to the store where items are cheaper. If I had gone to the Kroger owned store, those items would have been closer $75-80.
I'm keeping this insult to use later
Aren't they all?
JFC there is literally one reason why people would stop purchasing something critical for sustaining life... And it's not "summer travel." At least they included the part about high profits despite decreasing sales; too bad they glossed right over that.
2/5 stars article (because they at least said the quiet part out loud, before attempting to wave it away with utter nonsense).
I've had to get used to buying as cheap and little as possible. thankfully I don't have any kids to worry about, because the cheap stuff isn't the healthiest. Kool aid, bread, peanut butter, bologna, pot pies, and ramen mostly. sometimes I splurge on eggs, cheese, and meat. I have some canned goods, but save them for when I run out of the perishables. I don't see food getting any more affordable. my heart goes out to those with children.
You should try something like Mio. Not as bad as Kool Aid and pretty cheap considering how many drinks you get out of it.
It's probably because a gallon of milk is 7 dollars.
Sounds like consumers are saving money by cutting down on how much junk food they buy, based on the brands mentioned.