Tell this calculator roughly what you buy at the grocery store and it will tell you how much more you’re spending thanks to inflation.
Apparently I’m spending 29% more than I did in January 2017.
“Inflation” my arse.
Handwaving the obvious profiteering on groceries as “inflation” is disingenuous at best. Gasoline has been overprices due to obvious profiteering for years, but all people complain about is the tax portion of the cost (which is significant but not the lion’s share of the cost.)Gas tax (before HST) ranges 25.10-48.05 ¢/L
Out the window I see 182.9 ¢/L.
Without HST that’s 159.08 ¢/L.
Fuel tax is 32.20, leaving 126.88 ¢/L.
All together, that’s 30.6% tax, 69.4% operating and profit.
The ‘fun’ part is, the more gas prices go up, the less percentage goes to tax.
Nothing essential should be making a profit for anyone. The bare bones nutritional requirements should be free. Minimal housing should be free. Healthcare should be free. Access to clean water should be free. Everything deemed essential should be provided by the government at the lowest possible cost to the citizens. If you want cut lead crystals on everything then pay for that but the basics should be free or affordable. NOBODY SHOULD BE MAKING PROFITS OFF OF ESSENTIALS!!!
32% increase for me which actually seems like less than I expected. With everything I actually buy, I expect it to be closer to a 50% increase, and that’s with switching everything to the cheaper brands
That’s how it feels for me as well.
We still not factoring in pure profit vs actual overhead on big chain price increases?
Not even talking about it?
Ok.
I think, and I’ve noticed this a lot with local radio. Big media companies shy away from pointing fingers and criticizing ANY potential advertisers. I guess they don’t want to bite the hand that feeds them.
This is quite problematic.