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Economy
Americans getting squeezed by inflation are becoming 'resistant' to higher prices
2024-02-28
ConsumerAffairs reported that Pennsylvania saw highest grocery store inflation in 2023
[Fox News] As the Keystone State saw inflation last year dig deeper into residents’ wallets than any other state, one Philly-based food supplier is warning that the fight may not be over yet.

"The volume may tighten up a little bit. It's what we see as our customers are buying more often, [but] less at each purchase," he continued.

The Philadelphia-based produce supplier has been caught between higher input costs and consumers struggling to pay for inflationary prices. According to ConsumerAffairs, Pennsylvania saw the highest grocery inflation rate of any state in 2023, at an 8.2% increase year-over-year.

ConsumerAffairs’ analysis also comparatively noted that a family of four in Colorado who would have spent an average of $750 per month on groceries paid $21.75 more last year, while the same family in Pennsylvania forked up $61.50 more per month.

Inflation may be gradually cooling, but the average American is still shelling out a lot more money for everyday necessities.
The rate of inflation growth may be cooling. Maybe.
The typical U.S. household needed to pay $213 more a month in January to purchase the same goods and services it did one year ago because of still-high inflation, according to new calculations from Moody's Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi.
Average wages are up, taxes are up, so maybe it all balances out?

The regime viewpoint -
"Inflation is coming down. It’s now lower in America than any other major economy in the world," Biden said during a speech at South Carolina’s First in the Nation Dinner. "The cost of eggs, milk, chicken, gas, and so many other essential items have come down."

"But for all we’ve done to bring prices down, there are still too many corporations in America ripping people off," the president continued, "price gouging, junk fees, greedflation, shrinkflation."
Posted by:Bobby

#11  GenZers are going to miss all those home economic classes that the 'educators' did away with.

The next semester there was like 35 guys in Home Econ.


They don't know what to know, so they don't know what to look up. In the other ear, Corporate is telling them to look up Sumdood to come fix their blinds. It creates an atrophy of mind and body.

Got an assemble-it-youself drafting table, made it a point to assemble it in front of the kids and sure enough, especially with the decline of decent instructions over the last 10 years, and they at least see not only how to use the tools, but how to power through a blunt turn the screwdriver which fits into the space, plus 'gee wish I had this particular tool'.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2024-02-28 21:27  

#10  Just FYI - The next semester there was like 35 guys in Home Econ.
Posted by: Frank G   2024-02-28 19:15  

#9  Shop class might be more important than AP, given the current state of Higher "ED"
Posted by: Frank G   2024-02-28 19:13  

#8  Eat. And CHICKS!"

A trailblazer, indeed. Cooking is, as my chemist father demonstrated regularly, merely a particular branch of applied chemistry, so it probably helped with your engineering studies later. ;-)

My little sister (now a computer prof.) was the first girl to take shop. She figured she learned plenty of cooking at home, so she went to hang out with the guys and use very sharp implements of destruction.
Posted by: trailing wife   2024-02-28 19:05  

#7  I was a high school guys athletic team trailblazer @ taking Home Econ class:
"Idiots! You get to hang out with chicks, make each other food. Eat. And CHICKS!"
Posted by: Frank G   2024-02-28 18:35  

#6  all those home economic classes that the 'educators' did away with.

Lots of blogs and influencers among the Trad Wives know all that and more. The information is free and readily available — at least so long as there is electricity and the internet.
Posted by: trailing wife   2024-02-28 17:19  

#5  #3 only things the top 1% to 5% buy and those who play paper games to make money.

GenZers are going to miss all those home economic classes that the 'educators' did away with.

Posted by: Procopius2k   2024-02-28 17:11  

#4  Food and essentials only. Stick the rest of it up their arses.
Posted by: Besoeker   2024-02-28 16:48  

#3  The Fed calculates inflation using "a basket of things" nobody actually buys.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2024-02-28 16:34  

#2  
While the Fed's and their MSM cohorts outright lie and claim a 3.2% inflation rate. We have watched consumables & perishables (Gas, Meats, eggs, milk and etc..) jump 25 to 50++% and shrink in container size.

Hell most of what we now eat & drink does not taste like it did in pre-2020.
Posted by: NN2N1   2024-02-28 16:25  

#1  Let them have Cheerios for dinner.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2024-02-28 14:14  

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