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Related: About this forumConsumers take notice of shrinkflation
Three out of four surveyed consumers say they have noticed shrinkflation at the grocery store in the previous 30 days, according to the October 2024 Consumer Food Insights Report from Purdue University.
Shrinkflation is described as when food companies reduce the quantity or size of a food product while keeping the same price.
A variety of factors may influence a producers decision to downsize a products size, such as rising costs in the supply chain and inflationary pressures, Joseph Balagtas, professor of agricultural economics at Purdue and the reports lead author, said in a news release. The goal is to better understand how consumers perceive these reductions and if they have noticed them happening at all.
The survey sorted 1,200 consumer responses into two groups: households with children and those without children. Of the consumers who noticed shrinkflation, 78% say they have observed it in snack foods and 53% in packaged desserts and sweets. Just under half, 48%, also said they have observed shrinkflation in frozen foods. Those with children report seeing shrinkflation in a wider variety of food products, according to the release.
https://www.thepacker.com/news/retail/consumers-take-notice-shrinkflation
Traildogbob
(10,199 posts)Of saltines. The stacks of crackers inside are only 3/4 the height of the external box.
And we may all be having to live on crackers and generic peanut butter.
underpants
(187,387 posts)displacedvermoter
(3,237 posts)right?
jmbar2
(6,239 posts)It is used in a lot of recipes, and seems like the cans are now slightly smaller. Not a good enough cook to tell if it's different, but my tuna casserole is a bit drier lately.
2naSalit
(93,505 posts)Notice how a roll of TP now has a much larger, in diameter, spool, the squares are smaller in length and width, there's a lot of room on the spindle of the holder which means the squares have to be shorter on the roll as well to make them square. And the paper quality, yikes. Most brands are merely the dry, pre-soak mode of paper mache anymore, newsprint might be of better use at this point.
Cartoonist
(7,558 posts)6 bagels to 5 in a bag. When will it drop to 4?