Bought All liquid laundry detergent two weeks ago at my main grocery store. It was $8.99 for 88 oz. And wasn't on sale.
Just returned to the same store today and bought the exact same size and brand bottle.
Would anyone care to guess what it cost this time?
$18.99.
That's not a typo.
But, hey, there's definitely not price gouging going on. And inflation is only like 4%, so no big deal.
How scientific
It's not exactly rocket science, though, is it?
Wow!! So inflation is over 100% every two weeks now — that truly is hyperinflation.
Did you buy 4 bottles? I mean, clearly the price will be $36+ in a couple weeks.
Yes, that's definitely what I said. You really got me good there.
Clearly you are a smart individual. I’m just highlighting the uselessness of using a single example to prove a hypothesis on a topic as complex as price inflation.
In seriousness, what price do you expect to find in 2 weeks?
What's it going to be in 2 weeks? Who knows? And who cares? Whatever that number is, what would it prove? I don't even understand your point.
My examples are more useful than ignoring everything because "it's only one example" or "that's anecdotal." How many examples do you need? I've given more than one in this thread and others.
I could list hundreds or thousands of items and their increases if that was necessary, but it isn't.
It's far more useless to say "inflation is only 4%" when facts on the ground simply don't bear that out. Go to a store. Any store. Find me something that costs less now than it did a year ago. I would suggest you can't.
Every single thing I buy - everyday staples, bigger-ticket items, everything - is dramatically more expensive than it was six months ago or a year ago. It's just a matter of how much more expensive. And it ain't 4 percent.
I don't understand the point of trying to sit here and say that isn't the case. It is. Everyone knows it's true.
So why is that? Well, sure, it may be a complex answer for each different thing. But there's a general pattern of huge, huge price increases in every sector. And if you think corporate greed isn't playing a huge role in all this, well, then I'd say I think you're very naive.
It would be easier to cite examples of things that have only gone up slightly. I can think of a grand total of one thing that hasn't had huge price increases and/or package shrinking, and that's milk. And that's still gone up more than 4 percent.
Of course there are differences on certain items in certain areas. And I don't have access to that info. But I am sharing my info. And it's real. And it's fact.
So where does this 4 percent number come from? I don't know. But if that's what the grand formula is for determining inflation, it's all ********. It's made up. Common sense tells you that. Look around and open your eyes. There's a very obvious pattern, and it's a giant arrow pointed up on all prices.