A fuck ton of products could be shipped in reusable/recyclable glass container but no govt will ever force it. All condiments, dressings, jams, pickles etc. could fit in a dozen standard sized container that could be returned for a deposit (like beer bottles) and then reused by manufactures.
Yeah I've often wondered about stuff like bringing back "the milkman" and other such things. People could put out their old glassware for cleaning/re-use and have fresh product delivered in a new container. Stores are already back to doing home delivery for groceries.
It'd also bring back a whole genre of bad jokes about parentage.
I guarantee that corporations would simply start adding more cheap fillers to food if they were forced to comply with standardized size/weight requirements.
You'd get saline solution being injected into moisture rich foods, to increase their perceived weight, you'd have dry foods combined with super cheap fillers to give them more weight (but less actual food), etc.
You kind of already have that. I'm pretty sure that the mass of anything in the grocery store includes the maximum amount of allowed cheap mass.
Standardised packaging sizes would just reduce wastage from inconvenient package sizes and streamline packaging operations. Remember the giant plastic clamshell packaging of 10-15 years ago? Takes up more space on the shelves, can make a small product noticable, and was annoying as hell and wasteful too.
I'm one of the people that change prices in a grocery store. "Shrink-flation" has been horrible this year. Prices change very slightly or not at all while case quantities or package weights have been dropping.
I hate it because aside from me telling them constantly, it's changes that are almost invisible to management. If prices were just constantly going up, I'd have more of a leg to stand on with asking to reduce margins or going aggressive on sale pricing.
I like what that one grocer did in the article, calling it out for the customer. If we did it, though, the store would be littered with those signs, and customers would just go to another store that didn't use them.
I’ve started to pay more attention to Costco’s “price per unit” entries on those tags, I just wish that other stores that have lots of comparable items side-by-side would do it.
But bosses don't worry... officially we'll make sure to keep inflation numbers low so you don't feel pressured to give a reasonable cost of living increase. Let's keep those wages low!
Oh landlords, you guys can feel free to bump up your rents too... we don't want you to have to get a real job.
The only inflation they're concerned about is wage inflation, this has been proven multiple times and is even the official stance of central banks. Wage inflation cuts into corporate profits, which hurts "the economy". Why do you think the main indicator they watch is the unemployment rate?
They just don't usually say it out loud, and people aren't listening anyways. But the cat is out of the bag now with people spreading the word to the working class. Fucking us over is the goal, not a side effect.
It is also why there is so much attention paid to the stock market as an indicator when it is just rich people gambling that got more people to invest in it for retirement by playing coin clots.
"The economy" never represents the median person, or even the lower 3/4 of the population.
I also hated it when Cracker Barrel made their cheese extra tall and thin when they did their last round of Shrinkflation. Who wants tiny, thin slices of cheese? You need to make more slices for a sandwich, they don't fit any crackers, and the package makes it harder to see everything in the cheese drawer.
Plus, doesn't everyone compare cheese prices by weight anyway? It's always something different on sale every week, so I'm always looking at the price/weight and I buy something different half the time I go shopping. But maybe that's just me? idk
I was bitching a month ago about $5 sandwich sliced pickles that used to be $2.50 but last week they were raised to $9.50.
Look, 15 years ago I was homeless sleeping in my car. I was laid off 13 months ago but recently started a new job. Household income $150k. I have no idea how the average home income folks can possibly survive. I don't shop at fancy places and the necessities are making it hard on my family.
And by simply reducing the size of their products, people maybe feel like they're being tricked a little bit," said Sylvie De Bellefeuille, a lawyer with the consumer advocacy group Option Consommateurs.
When CBC News met with Chauhan, he was making a TikTok video about Ben and Jerry's ice cream, which recently shrunk by 5.4 per cent to 473 millilitres.
Instead of waiting for legislation, major French grocer Carrefour has started posting signs in stores, exposing downsized products.
Justin Simard, a spokesperson for Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, told CBC News in an email that Ottawa has identified shrinkflation as a practice that hurts consumers.
Although many grocery items are tax-exempt, shoppers must pay tax on snack foods such as muffins, pastries, cereal bars and cookies in packages of less than six and containers of ice cream under 500 millilitres.
Chauhan discovered this when he purchased two tubs of Ben and Jerry's to make his TikTok video, and was charged 13 per cent harmonized sales tax.
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