- Oct 12, 2022
- 2,702
Sadly, I find the 40% premium over Sainsbury’s prices difficult to justify, but I’m glad somebody’s keeping the flag flying.Waitrose darling
Sadly, I find the 40% premium over Sainsbury’s prices difficult to justify, but I’m glad somebody’s keeping the flag flying.Waitrose darling
Shocking isn't it!!Sadly, I find the 40% premium over Sainsbury’s prices difficult to justify, but I’m glad somebody’s keeping the flag flying.
Good point about Lidl …I quite enjoy shopping (as far as shopping can ever be enjoyable) at the Shoreham store…easy to park…not too big and cashiers friendly…but you get stuffed by it not being on the shelf I’ve got round this by keeping a good stock of things….. I combine a Lidl shop with Tescos and just keep MS for wkd has served me well since I’ve changed my shopping habitsLidl halves my shopping costs compared to Sainsbury’s, but you always run the risk of them not having something you want/need. Stock levels fluctuate wildly. Strangely, when we tried Aldi, the shop was only fractionally less than the Sainsbury’s cost.
Having said that, I went to Sainsbury’s yesterday to get the ingredients for a decent Valentine’s meal, and the fresh produce sections were a wasteland of empty display units. The contrast with pre-Brexit availability still seems incredible, even for crops that can be grown in the U.K.
As the poster said it has gone down so they are factually correct …diesel 164.9 at my local Tescos station …whether it should be lower is another matterIt's not though, it should be at least 30p cheaper for diesel and the delta between diesel and petrol has grown massive, artificially. That drives everything else up too.
It's gone up. If items are artificially increased in cost to then be 'reduced' by a fraction of the increase then the cost has still increased. Its not a price drop.As the poster said it has gone down so they are factually correct …diesel 164.9 at my local Tescos station …whether it should be lower is another matter
Shareholder dividends?Today's moan. Colgate toothpaste at Aldi. Was 99p for 100 ml tube. Today 99p for 75 ml tube. That's equivalent to a 33% increase. What is in toothpaste that costs 33% more.
What’s the availability like compared to pre Russian invasion of Ukraine? Just out of interest.Lidl halves my shopping costs compared to Sainsbury’s, but you always run the risk of them not having something you want/need. Stock levels fluctuate wildly. Strangely, when we tried Aldi, the shop was only fractionally less than the Sainsbury’s cost.
Having said that, I went to Sainsbury’s yesterday to get the ingredients for a decent Valentine’s meal, and the fresh produce sections were a wasteland of empty display units. The contrast with pre-Brexit availability still seems incredible, even for crops that can be grown in the U.K.
What’s the availability like compared to pre Russian invasion of Ukraine? Just out of interest.
A large percentage of our foodstuffs sadly come from the continent and due to the 'B' word do involve consideraby more now in terms of import costs. Add to that the increasing costs of fuel since the war in Ukraine and you have a perfect mix to see prices increase so much.
"Most people think Britain only imports about 50% of its food. But the reality is that 80% of food is imported, including basics such as carrots and tea.
The 50% statistic underrepresents the reality, McCarthy says. In reality, "80% of food is imported into the UK," he wrote. The lower number "defines food processed in the UK as UK food, even though the ingredients may have been imported. For example, tea is processed in the UK, but we grow no tea — it is all imported. When ingredients are counted as imported, the real figure is over 80%. It gets worse. "Much of the food industry is staffed by overseas workers and a major labour shortage is hurting the sector since Brexit. For example, there is a shortage of Heavy Goods Vehicle (HGV) drivers, with many HGV drivers in the UK coming from central Europe. As one CEO said at our CEO Forum in 2017: 'UK distribution would grind to a halt if free movement of labour was halted and truck drivers went home,'" McCarthy's team wrote." (HSBC Analayst) - A profoundly accurate prediction.
We are too dependent on imports for our food and this is why we are subject to increasing costs together with increased costs involved with extra red tape and paper work. This ain't going away anytime soon.
It's the Red Stripe, officerToday's moan. Colgate toothpaste at Aldi. Was 99p for 100 ml tube. Today 99p for 75 ml tube. That's equivalent to a 33% increase. What is in toothpaste that costs 33% more.
If you want or ever wanted 75% of produce to be home grown, you wouldnt be eating Tomatoes and 101 other things this time of year. Thats post/pre/during and before we ever invented the word Brexit.Is legislation to make sure all the supermarkets sell 75% of goods produced from the UK viable?
Or has that horse well and truly bolted?
You can't easily grow Tomatoes and salad crops here in the UK at this time of the year without huge expense of heating the greenhouses...when part of the EU we could easily buy winter salad crops from southern Europe but now its a pain to import them thanks to the paperwork.Is legislation to make sure all the supermarkets sell 75% of goods produced from the UK viable?
Or has that horse well and truly bolted?
The have’s and the have-not’s.Most people still seem able to drive round a Range Rover, it’s almost the most common car on the roads these days; and/or have 5-6 vehicles in 4 person household. We are far from impoverished. This or people have for their priorities astonishingly wrong if citing food is expensive (it is, but cars more so!!)
not just the veg, wheat, sugar, pulses have large volume imported, usually from the old colonies.If you want or ever wanted 75% of produce to be home grown, you wouldnt be eating Tomatoes and 101 other things this time of year. Thats post/pre/during and before we ever invented the word Brexit.
The main reasons for lack of fresh produce on supermarket shelves is that for a long time theyve screwed over the producers in their incessant race to the bottom with 69p veg etc. Add tp that, the problem with the harvest in Spain at the moment and that has brought about the lack of cheap veg. Supermarkets, generally , sell Class 2 veg. That is the veg that was bought cheap when the harvest was abundant, has been stored and artificially kept fresh or was not that fresh in the first place. Hence the fact that a few days after youve bought it, it doesnt look so good. Now, everybody wants what little veg there is thats good so the market is dictating the prices. Some fruit and veg (mainly veg) has doubled in price, and more, this week at the wholesale market.
The only answer is to eat seasonally and appreciate the salads, strawberries etc when they arrive in the summer and not expect them all year round.