How Costco Is Masking A 14% Price Jump With Shrinkflation

Via ZeroHedge

The oldest trick in the retailer book is back.

We have previously written about shrinkflation – the “creative” masking of higher prices whereby retailers sell a materially lower amount of products for the ‘same’ price, covering up what is often a significant price increase on a “per unit” basis (see “”Shrinkflation” – How Food Companies Implement Massive Price Hikes Without You Ever Noticing“, “Shrinkflation Hits The UK: Toblerone Shrinks By 10%, Price Stays The Same“, Shrinkflation Intensifies – Stealth Inflation As Thousands of Food Products Shrink In Size, Not Price), and we have a feeling that in light of the recent surge in commodity costs and food prices, we will be writing about it a whole lot more in the coming weeks.

Take Costco, which as The Bear Traps report notes, is now charging the same price for paper towels but the roll has 20 fewer sheets. TBT refers to a recent post in a Red Flag Deals message board, where a member makes the following observation:

Costco paper towels. Same price as the previous several times buying them. Now with 20 fewer sheets.

140/160= .875

The stealthy decline of 20 sheets per roll of towels from 160 to 140 for the “same price” is the functional equivalent of 14.3% inflation, and as TBT notes, “In our experience, only potato chip companies can get away with selling a half empty package.”

Of course, once companies realize they can get away with such shrinkflation – and they will because as a RFD member responds…

I tried telling the clerk at Costco about this, and they said “who cares, it’s just 20 sheets.”

Will be the typical response.

… the obvious next step will be to no longer bother with such attempts at masking double digit inflation, and to hike prices outright until there is an actual decline in supply, or as TBT predicts, “this is the precursor to real inflation next.” And sure enough, names from consumer giants from Kimberly-Clark to Clorox, Procter & Gamble, as well as food makers such as Hormel, JM Smucker, General Mills, Skippy and Hershey are already doing just that.

But don’t worry, according to the Chairman, “it’s transitory.”

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9 Comments
Fedup
Fedup
May 2, 2021 7:43 am

Every store does that.
Do you know that the drop in price on weekly specials at your local grocery store are countered with everything else in the store going up in price.
With all the VIP cards being used to track items sold, it’s easier for them to adjust prices to make up the difference.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
May 2, 2021 9:36 am

We open and feed out a lot of product the grocery stores date out and we’ve been watching this for several years. A box of popular crackers goes from 16 ounces to 12 ounces but the box stays the same size, for example. In fact the only things that remain fixed in measurement are those items marked by a specific unit- a gallon of milk, a dozen eggs- everything else is being reduced in size (except the packaging).

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  hardscrabble farmer
May 2, 2021 10:53 am

A 1/2 gal of ice cream is now only 3 qts. It changed quite a few years ago.
I save send use coffee cans for storing music hardware and can show the decrease in size over the years.
Several years ago, I noticed a 16 oz, 4 serving bag of frozen vegetables changed into a 12 oz, 4 serving bag. Same number of servings, so no “official” inflation.

Stucky
Stucky
  TN Patriot
May 2, 2021 11:25 am

“A 1/2 gal of ice cream is now only 3 qts.”

Ummm …. there are FOUR quarts to a gallon. Thus, according to my advanced mathematical abilities, I have concluded that 1/2 gallon = TWO quarts.

Now, since a half gallon on your neck of the woods appears to be THREE quarts …. I think you’re getting a helluva deal. 🙂

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Stucky
May 2, 2021 6:43 pm

Sorry, my maff be wrong. They are now 3 pints, rather than the 4 pints of yesteryear.

Jack Kennedy
Jack Kennedy
  TN Patriot
May 2, 2021 8:32 pm

lol…my maff be wrong….

Zulu Foxtrot Golf
Zulu Foxtrot Golf
May 2, 2021 2:49 pm

This has been going on for years. Look at bag sizes then look at weights of contents. Over the last 30 years there has been around a 30% reduction in weight for candy bars, chips, peanuts, dried fruits and some other staple items at grocers. Anyone not paying attention to price per oz has been asleep at the wheel.

This tactic is used to counter inflation but it causes it as well, so win for the producers of a product and lose for consumers of the product. Moreover, consumer get hit with inflation twice as hard as a result. Even funnier is next time take a good look at a king size item such as snickers and a regular size one of same and you see the better rate per oz is the smaller/regular size.

Pay attention friends. The grift has been ongoing for a while now. Fuck, look at what they did to gasoline by diluting it with that shit ethanol.

ZFG, out.

P.S. go long on making your own jerky.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
May 2, 2021 9:10 pm

Actually, it is NOT retailers that are doing this….the FEDERAL RESERVE is doing this, with every new monetary unit they create out of thin air. There are certainly instances in which the supply of raw materials suffers an unexpected loss, and higher prices sweep through the supply chain for finished goods made from those raw materials. But all things being equal, inflating the money supply increases the prices of good and services as a larger supply of money competes for a generally fixed supply of goods. Sadly of course this kind of maneuver by sellers only plays into the bullshit formulas the treasury assholes use in calculating inflation – same price, same 12 rolls, no inflation….problem solved. Oh, and the price will certainly rise too, even if not right away.