The other day, I bought a certain food product. An otherwise tasty bag of chips from a certain brand. Aside from the delicious mid-afternoon snack, I couldn’t help but notice the obvious “shrinkage” of the contents. And it wasn’t one of those “it’s only smaller because you’re comparing it to when you were a child.” This particular bag was noticeably smaller than prior purchases. The respective brand clearly shrunk the product.
“Shrinkflation,” as it’s now known, is what happens when you get less of a particular item, like a bag of chips, for the same price or even a bit more. The company packages the product in the same or nearly the same way, but reduces the content(s) while maintaining the price, or in some cases, raising it slightly. Such economic developments can be devastating for America’s consumers, especially during the Christmas holidays. Food prices immediately come to mind when it comes to shrinkflation, but the phenomenon can affect consumers in any number of products. According to findings by CNBC, 49 percent of consumers say they purchased a different brand, while 48 percent say they opted for a generic brand over a name brand, while 33 percent chose to purchase in bulk rather than smaller packages.
“Rising gas prices are obvious, but at the grocery store, shrinkflation can look like products with suspiciously smaller amounts selling for the same price as before,” says Amy Fontinelle, personal finance journalist, in a recent Reader’s Digest piece. “Or the products themselves might be changing – the milk, cream, and sugar in your favorite ice cream might be replaced with cost-saving bulking agents like corn syrup solids or whey protein.” Shrinkflation is not new to corporate America’s operational or manufacturing habits or principles; Companies have employed the practice for decades in order to offset production costs. For consumers, however, having to compensate for shrinkflation in addition to enduring the lasting effects of the pandemic and continued supply chain issues is simply too much, especially when you have to find a way to budget for the Christmas season.
What are the forces that create shrinkflation?
Inflation and existing supply chain challenges continue to devastate the U.S. and the worldwide economy while corporations’ manufacturing costs are still experiencing an upward trajectory. In many cases, they’re not raising their prices so much as shrinking their respective products. By doing this, the companies can still sell their products at the same price but they’re saving costs on manufacturing smaller portions. And it’s completely legal, as long as the company clearly indicates a precise weight to which customers can compare with the overall price. The following examples by Forbes and BuzzFeed are everyday products that have already been affected by shrinkflation:
In response, a Frito-Lay representative told Quartz while rationalizing Doritos’s shrinkflation in 2021: “We took just a little out of the bag so we can give you the same price and you can keep enjoying your chips.” Frito-Lay reported a 12.9 percent revenue growth in 2021 and expects a six percent revenue growth in 2022. Not exactly the response households like to hear.
How shrinkflation affects families’ Christmas season and what they can do about it
If you’re not looking for it, shrinkflation may not be noticeable at first. A certain number of chips missing from your bag of Cool Ranch Doritos may not matter to you. The point of all this is that consumers are intimately aware that they’re paying the same price for less of a return; an often infuriating reality for consumers still smarting from the sting of increased costs from this year’s inflation crisis due to numerous factors.
Here are some tips for how to keep your money in check during Christmas and stop paying more for less:
Plan ahead for your shopping experience
Impulse shopping can set your shopping budget back in a number of unfortunate ways. “Shoppers should do everything they can to avoid impulse purchases,” advises Kevin Payne in Amy Fontinelle’s Reader’s Digest article. “The best way to do this is to meal-plan each week and only shopping for what you need.”
Prioritize Christmas shopping lists
Certain products or items are necessary for covering the essentials for your family’s holiday experience. Others, not so much. Shop with a plan that focuses your budget toward holiday staples that your family can’t go without. It is the holidays, however. Don’t cut the fun parts completely out of the picture. Perhaps cut out unnecessary products for comparable ones that are on sale.
Convenient and fast small dollar loans
It has become an annual campaign of financial preservation for millions of consumers in figuring out how they’re going to afford the various expenses necessary to give their families a memorable Christmas, and responsible small dollar loans from one’s local credit union represent one of the most secure and stabilizing options there is in the financial services industry.
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Ever use coupons?
The great thing about coupons is they aren’t complicated. A straight-forward concept, the customer doesn’t have to spend hours figuring out how they can save .50 cents on a particular grocery item for Christmas dinner. Consult the grocery store’s mobile app to look for specials and the manufacturer’s coupons for any items on your list. If convenient, stop by two nearby grocery stores if it means it will save needed dollars.
Track your spending efforts
Ever had those years when throughout the month of December you just spurge, not even remotely considering your budget and what you’re spending it on? Future you has some advice: Don’t do that again. Track how you’re spending your money so you don’t overspend and destroy this budget and your budget going into the new year.
Use your credit card rewards program, but beware
If you shop with credit cards, use its credit card rewards program. But, to get the most out of such programs, you need to be in the habit of paying off your credit card on time, in full, and not carrying a balance. If you don’t, the credit card’s interest charges often outweigh the rewards. Also, consumers need to make sure which grocery retailers your credit card issuer considers grocery stores.
Shrinkflation can be an infuriating concept to accept as a consumer, and corporations deserve to hear about it. With the actions listed above, consumers can learn to lessen shrinkflation’s effects on their budgets, save money in challenging times, and become a consistently savvy consumer in the long run.
(Partially reprinted from cuinsight.com)
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