Inflation - Printable Version +- Garden And Gossip Forums (https://gardenandgossip.org) +-- Forum: General (https://gardenandgossip.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=6) +--- Forum: General discussion (https://gardenandgossip.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=7) +--- Thread: Inflation (/showthread.php?tid=2111) Pages:
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RE: Inflation - Veggie - 17-04-2024 Good news for Vinny - not so good for pigs. "The cost of some items including meat, crumpets, chocolate biscuits, furniture and household items fell. However, petrol and diesel prices rose. Meat prices, driven by a drop in the cost of pork, fell by 0.5% between February and March, compared with a rise of 1.4% a year ago. It means the meat price rises slowed further to 3.1% in the year to March, the lowest rate since November 2021. Prices for furniture and household goods like cleaning products also fell by 0.9% in the year to March." Not much to make me smile on that list. Meat, crumpets, furniture and cleaning products, don't appear in my shopping basket often RE: Inflation - Vinny - 17-04-2024 I buy cream crackers (And NO I am not!!!) regualrily as I go through quite a lot. The reason is that I like to slather them with butter which is my way of dealing with my carb addiction! I know crackers are high carb but hopefully the amount of butter I add to them will make my body use fat as a source of fuel rather than the carbs inthem? Crackers are the only carbs I use. (Apart from the odd ice cream) I love belly pork done in the air fryer but it is never cut thin enough to fully 'crisp up'. I have bought a hand slicer to facilitate this and now buy my belly pork in a lump.I then have to freeze it before slicing it thinly, similar to bacon! RE: Inflation - JJB - 18-04-2024 Notwithstanding the figures, I'm not noticing the reduction in inflation. They can spout whatever figures they want but until you notice a significant drop in the weekly shop/bills, it's just number crunching. I found a 2008 Tesco receipt in the iron box and it was quite surprising. Some items were even more expensive. The cheap and cheerful iron was £4.50. I think I used for the first time yesterday. That was a real necessity wasn't it? RE: Inflation - MartinH - 19-04-2024 The reduction in inflation means prices are still going up every week, just not as quickly. We've got a long wait until prices actually drop. Probably never happen. RE: Inflation - Vinny - 19-04-2024 (18-04-2024, 08:53 AM)JJB Wrote: Notwithstanding the figures, I'm not noticing the reduction in inflation. They can spout whatever figures they want but until you notice a significant drop in the weekly shop/bills, it's just number crunching. I found a 2008 Tesco receipt in the iron box and it was quite surprising. Some items were even more expensive. The cheap and cheerful iron was £4.50. I think I used for the first time yesterday. That was a real necessity wasn't it?Whats an iron? RE: Inflation - toomanytommytoes - 19-04-2024 (19-04-2024, 07:28 AM)MartinH Wrote: The reduction in inflation means prices are still going up every week, just not as quickly. We've got a long wait until prices actually drop. Probably never happen.And all of the products which have shrunk in volume or weight are never going to go back to their original size. RE: Inflation - Bren - 19-04-2024 (19-04-2024, 09:26 AM)Vinny Wrote:It's a power tool that usually kept under the stairs or lurking at the back of a cupboard.(18-04-2024, 08:53 AM)JJB Wrote: Notwithstanding the figures, I'm not noticing the reduction in inflation. They can spout whatever figures they want but until you notice a significant drop in the weekly shop/bills, it's just number crunching. I found a 2008 Tesco receipt in the iron box and it was quite surprising. Some items were even more expensive. The cheap and cheerful iron was £4.50. I think I used for the first time yesterday. That was a real necessity wasn't it?Whats an iron? RE: Inflation - JJB - 19-04-2024 (19-04-2024, 05:27 PM)Bren Wrote:How right you are. This very cheap iron was stored on the very top shelf of the broom cupboard, behind paint tins and dust sheets, all but inaccessible. I'm vaguely surprised I even remembered it was there.(19-04-2024, 09:26 AM)Vinny Wrote:It's a power tool that usually kept under the stairs or lurking at the back of a cupboard.(18-04-2024, 08:53 AM)JJB Wrote: Notwithstanding the figures, I'm not noticing the reduction in inflation. They can spout whatever figures they want but until you notice a significant drop in the weekly shop/bills, it's just number crunching. I found a 2008 Tesco receipt in the iron box and it was quite surprising. Some items were even more expensive. The cheap and cheerful iron was £4.50. I think I used for the first time yesterday. That was a real necessity wasn't it?Whats an iron? RE: Inflation - Small chilli - 20-04-2024 (19-04-2024, 08:16 PM)JJB Wrote:I’m still using the iron I left home with ** years ago . You won’t be surprised to find it doesn’t get used very often.(19-04-2024, 05:27 PM)Bren Wrote:How right you are. This very cheap iron was stored on the very top shelf of the broom cupboard, behind paint tins and dust sheets, all but inaccessible. I'm vaguely surprised I even remembered it was there.(19-04-2024, 09:26 AM)Vinny Wrote:It's a power tool that usually kept under the stairs or lurking at the back of a cupboard.(18-04-2024, 08:53 AM)JJB Wrote: Notwithstanding the figures, I'm not noticing the reduction in inflation. They can spout whatever figures they want but until you notice a significant drop in the weekly shop/bills, it's just number crunching. I found a 2008 Tesco receipt in the iron box and it was quite surprising. Some items were even more expensive. The cheap and cheerful iron was £4.50. I think I used for the first time yesterday. That was a real necessity wasn't it?Whats an iron? (weddings, funerals & court cases only ) |