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Biden talks about fighting shrinkflation in SOTU speech

Shrinkflation: The White House retweeted Cookie Monster about it. The president made his own Super Bowl video about it.

Editor: I begrudgingly listen to Conservative radio (sometimes yelling at the top of my lungs and swearing at the radio show hosts) while driving to keep up on what they’re saying about the news and what narratives they’re spinning. The other morning they were discussing shrinkflation and inflation in general. They began referring to high prices on groceries, which are often due to corporate greed. We know from recorded calls that CEOs chose to raise prices, not because they’re costs were higher, but because ‘why not during a time when we can get away with it?’

Instead of saying that the Left and Biden blame the high prices on corporate greed, they lied and said it’s being blamed on grocery store greed, and everyone knows their local grocer, sits beside them at little league games. So no one actually believes that it’s the greed of a community friend. Basically taking the fact that corporate greed can be to blame for some high food prices, and instead saying it’s being blamed on local grocers. FYI: I do most of my yelling and swearing during the Mark Levin show as he tells blatant lies and plays out of context statements while lying to his audience while explaining what the speaker was referring to. BTW, if you covet your sanity, do NOT listen to the show or watch it on Fox News.

Here is Casey Quinlan of Tennessee Lookout news talking about shrinkflation.

The White House retweeted Cookie Monster about it. The president made his own Super Bowl video about it.

And then President Joe Biden made it a point in his State of the Union speech: “Shrinkflation” must be stopped.

Biden said Thursday during his annual address that he is taking on corporations that are making more money by selling reduced amounts of their products but not lowering the price — giving consumers less bang for their buck. He’s also focusing more on practices of so-called price gouging that are weighing on American families’ budgets.

“Too many corporations raise their prices to pad their profits, charging you more and more for less and less,” Biden said. “That’s why we’re cracking down on corporations that engage in price gouging or deceptive pricing from food to health care to housing.”

The “less and less” Biden referred to is shrinkflation. “In fact, the snack companies think you won’t notice if they change the size of the bag and put a hell of a lot fewer — same size bag — and put fewer chips in it,” Biden added.

What they’re doing during this period of high inflation is actually expanding their profit margins above and beyond historical averages.

Lindsay Owens, Groundwork Collaborative

Heading into the general election after Biden and former President Donald Trump both racked up needed delegates to secure their parties’ nominations on Super Tuesday, Biden used part of his speech to focus voters on their pocketbooks. A recent Pew Research survey says Americans rank the economy as their No. 1 policy issue for 2024.

The Biden administration recently launched a joint task force of the U.S Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission to focus on corporate pricing.

Some economists have argued that despite some of the labor and nonlabor costs easing, corporate profit remains high, suggesting that corporations are keeping prices much higher than necessary to make juicy profits. Corporate profits as a share of national income rose 29% since 2020 and drove 53% of inflation in the second and third quarter of 2023, according to Groundwork Collaborative’s analysis of Federal Reserve and Bureau of Economic Analysis data.

“What they’re doing during this period of high inflation is actually expanding their profit margins above and beyond historical averages,” said Lindsay Owens, executive director of Groundwork Collaborative, an economic policy think tank. “Companies have really been using the kind of cover of inflation and the fact that Americans expect prices to increase to go a little further than they needed to. And they’ve brought in really considerable profits as a result.”

The personal consumption expenditures index, a measure the Federal Reserve focuses on more in its fight to reduce inflation, moved up 0.3% in January and 2.4% in the past 12 months. Wages were up 4.3% over the past year, according to the February jobs report, outpacing inflation.

But slowing inflation doesn’t mean that prices are affordable for most Americans and research has shown that factors other than supply chain issues, the war in Ukraine, and climate change – such as a corporate drive for profits – may play a role.

This is having an effect on common household products many families have no choice but to purchase. In the highly concentrated diaper market, Procter & Gamble and Kimberly Clark have helped keep diaper prices elevated for parents despite the cost of a major component of diapers falling, the Groundwork Collaborative report explained. The cost of disposable diapers in 2019 was 16.54 compared to $22.17 as of Feb. 24, according to NIQ’s consumer data. NIQ determines the cost by the average cost of a diaper package not by a specific package size of diapers.

Some economists have pointed out that these high profits during the economic recovery are nothing like the profits businesses have made in past economic cycles. Chief economist at the Economic Policy Institute, Josh Bivens, explained in 2022 that, “Evidence from the past 40 years suggests strongly that profit margins should shrink…”

During his speech, Biden shouted out a bill introduced by U.S. Sen. Bob Casey (D-PA) that he said would help address the problem. The legislation, which he introduced in February, allows the Federal Trade Commission to pursue regulations that establish it as a deceptive or unfair practice. Casey is also a cosponsor of the Price Gouging Prevention Act, which was reintroduced in February and would establish price gouging as an unfair or deceptive practice as well.

Edgar Dworsky,founder of Consumer World, a consumer resource guide, said companies use all kinds of tricks to deceive customers about the size of what they’re buying,  from deep indentations on the bottom of peanut butter jars and large cereal boxes with much smaller bags of cereal inside than packaging would suggest. Paper goods, candy, chips, orange juice, and specialty milks are some of the products that tend to be most subject to “shrinkflation,” he said, although corporations have broadly implemented the practice across product types.

As a consumer advocate who has been focusing on shrinkflation for many years, Dworsky said it was encouraging to see the president use his State of the Union speech to draw attention to the issue.

“I’ve been warning people about the downsizing of products and trying to raise awareness of it,” he said. “And to have the likes of the president and Cookie Monster come out and help raise public awareness about it, I just think it’s sensational.”

The article in this post was originally published on Tennessee Lookout and parts of it are included here under a Creative Commons license CC BY-ND 4.0

Casey Quinlan is an economy reporter for States Newsroom, based in Washington D.C. For the past decade, they have reported on national politics and state politics, LGBTQ rights, abortion access, labor issues, education, Supreme Court news and more for…

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