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Looking for Inflation? It’s Hiding in Smaller Package Sizes

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  • Looking for Inflation? It’s Hiding in Smaller Package Sizes

    Looking for Inflation? It’s Hiding in Smaller Package Sizes Looking for Inflation? It?s Hiding in Smaller Package Sizes - Yahoo! Finance

    Good things may come in small packages, but they certainly aren't good deals. Here's how your favorite grocery-store items are shrinking before your eyes.


    The fact is, for those who are willing to look close enough, we’re actually being confronted by a serious bout of deflation - at least when it comes to the size of the containers sitting on our supermarket shelves.

    With prices continuing to rise in the face of the depressed economic climate, manufacturers continue to find themselves caught in a classic dilemma: either raise prices and risk losing customers, or stave off the price increase by shrinking the size of their packaging ever so slightly.

    Anybody care to guess which option the company brass most often decides to take when faced with the need to make that kind of lose-lose decision?

    The Evidence is All Around You

    Although I can’t prove it, I suspect the majority of manufacturers ultimately decide that a little deception is worth it if it means they can hold back those dreaded price increases.

    A recent article on this topic in The New York Times provides plenty of circumstantial evidence.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/29/bu...C/EcHCaSbl3Wvg

    For example…

    Chicken of the Sea tuna now comes in 5-ounce cans, as opposed to the traditional 6-ounce containers
    Doritos, Fritos, and Tostitos reduced the quantity of chips in their bags by 20 percent
    Tropicana recently dropped their orange juice carton size from 64 to 59 ounces
    Nabisco’s Premium saltines and Honey Maid grahams have new packaging with 15 percent fewer crackers

    Of course, there are other examples you may already be aware of…

    It used to be that a standard ice cream container held a half-gallon of the stuff. Not anymore. Over the past half-dozen years or so, Breyer’s has seen their package size shrink from a half-gallon to 1.75 quarts – before shriveling again to 1.5 quarts.

    Meanwhile, if you bother to look closely at the label, you’ll notice that a “pint” of Haagen Dazs is actually only 14 ounces. It’s been that way since 2009.

    Thankfully, Ben & Jerry’s hasn’t followed suit. I just checked my freezer, and I see that a pint of my beloved Chunky Monkey is still a full 16 ounces. (Although I guess that isn’t such good news for my waistline.)

    When it comes to peanut butter, Skippy shrank their 18-ounce container size down to 16.3 ounces back in 2008. Not 16 ounces, mind you, but 16.3.

    Don’t ask me why they didn’t just stick to whole numbers. Maybe they didn’t want to push their luck.

    On the other hand, choosy mothers will be pleased to know that Jif peanut butter still comes in the traditional 18-ounce jar.

    Don’t be Too Hard on the Manufacturers

    Despite all of these examples, I don’t really think this is a case of manufacturers trying to make a fast buck on the consumer.

    Historically, manufacturers have been raising and lowering package sizes in order to keep from raising prices for a long, long time. For example, Hershey has been altering the size of their candy bars to account for fluctuating ingredient costs from as far back as 1908.

    Between 1921 and 1968 the price of a Hershey chocolate bar held steady at a sinInsert Linkgle nickel. During that time, the weight of the bar fluctuated — in both directions — from a high of 2 ounces in 1930 to a low of 0.75 ounces in 1968.

    And while you may be annoyed that manufacturers surreptitiously reduce package sizes in order to hold prices steady, they’re not the ones who are instituting the monetary policies that have led to the current bout of inflation.

    To be sure, inflation is getting so bad now that I see even TP isn’t immune from package downsizing. In their own study of shrinking package sizes, Consumer Reports found that a roll of Scott toilet paper – excuse me, toilet tissue – has 9 percent less paper on a roll than it used to.

    Hey, it could be worse. Scott could have tried holding prices down by going from 2-ply to 1-ply instead. Or even 1.3-ply.

    Then again, I suspect that type of deception is something most of us would have noticed sooner rather than later.
    Lawren
    ------------------------
    There are many wonderful places in the world, but one of my favourite places is on the back of my horse.
    - Rolf Kopfle

  • #2
    Interesting post. I did notice some smaller sizes as I have been shopping.

    Thank you

    Comment


    • #3
      Facial tissues are a good example- only store brands (and not all of them) are holding at the 160 per box size. Kleenex has decreased size twice and now is trying the 100 count level. Coffee is down from the pound can to 10.5 to 13 ounces and I wonder if the inner rim was instituted for the easy open advent or just a way to make it harder to empty the can completely (or both).

      Comment


      • #4
        Yesterday I was buying peanut butter when I saw on the Jif jar - we are still 18 oz! Sure enough, the Skippy and Peter Pan were 16.3 oz. Small enough not to be too obvious but enough to make a difference to the companies!
        Jacki

        Comment


        • #5
          I've noticed that too. There are a few pasta/noodles, that are now being sold in 13 oz packages opposed to 16.
          Angela

          If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.

          BTW, I'm still keeping track of how many times you annoy me.

          Comment


          • #6
            Also, I bought a Whitman Sampler (chocolates) to bring as a gift, and it is now 12oz. It used to be a pound.
            Jacki

            Comment


            • #7
              This has messed up a few of the recipes I always make, especially the holiday recipes!

              Comment


              • #8
                See's candy bars have shrunk. I don't know what they used to weigh, but now they come in a fancy wrapper for .05 more. However, they look quite a bit smaller.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Ice Cream

                  Used to be a half gallon, now it is 1 1/2 pints.

                  Greg
                  Yes it is Safe in Mexico



                  http://www.timeshareparadise.net

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Although this may not be true for many American grocery stores, the majority of Canadian stores now have an inforced "per unit weight" that must be shown on the shelf label. This allows you to compare more appropriately the costs. Unfortunately, when items go on sale there must be some loophole cause all of a sudden the per unit weights are gone.

                    There used to be a time when the "bulk" sizes were always less expensive, but you really have to shop. Often, the smaller size is the better deal. I ran into that the first, and last time I ever went to TGI Fridays. They tried to sell me on the bigger draft beer, even though it was actually less expensive.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by SherryS View Post
                      This has messed up a few of the recipes I always make, especially the holiday recipes!
                      It's never messed up a recipe for me but it sometimes means I end up opening two cans instead of one and then having something left over, which irks me, since I'm dreadful at using up bits of stuff and I hate to just throw away food.

                      Originally posted by gandalf252002 View Post
                      Although this may not be true for many American grocery stores, the majority of Canadian stores now have an inforced "per unit weight" that must be shown on the shelf label. This allows you to compare more appropriately the costs. Unfortunately, when items go on sale there must be some loophole cause all of a sudden the per unit weights are gone.
                      Ditto and ditto here in the U.S. Midwest, although some places are better than others at listing the sale price by unit.

                      Originally posted by gandalf252002 View Post
                      There used to be a time when the "bulk" sizes were always less expensive, but you really have to shop. Often, the smaller size is the better deal.
                      Also true here. I think as family sizes have gone smaller on average, the number of people willing to commit to larger sizes, especially when it comes to canned goods and the like, has gone down to the point that few people are even buying the bigger stuff, and I wonder if most of the people buying the bigger stuff are doing it "on automatic" because they think they're getting the better deal. Our family's definitely large enough to get the bigger ones but we'll often get two of the smaller instead, since it's cheaper.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Sugar

                        Today I noticed Domino sugar was 4 lb instead of 5.
                        Robert

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