Inflation has made me not understand prices anymore in the sense that I no longer understand what an appropriate price for any food is. Is a $5 bag of chips a good deal? Because that sounds fucking insane to 2018 me. And yet, that is how much they cost.
I need yall to understand just how fucking BONKERS price increases are now. Statistics Canada tracks food prices here - not everything, but the essential stuff.
Like, for example, 1KG of chicken breasts. The monthly average price in January 2026? $14.40 January 2020? $11.91 January 2017 (as far back as we can go)? $11.38
How about simple ground coffee? $9.35 for 340 grams Back in 2020? $5.32 2017? $4.59
900grams of infant formula in 2026? $51.39 2020? $29.20 2017? $27.22
Like - yall. Post-covid corporations have been absolutely screwing us. And they fucking KNOW it. They keep saying "inflation" and "trade war" and "weather phenomenon" but NONE of these accounts for how big the jump has been since COVID. They keep hitting record profits and jacking up the price citing whatever the fuck they want.
Like - PepsiCo just figured out people WON'T buy a $7 bag of Doritos. So what are they doing? "Oh we'll just drop it down 50 cents...
When every company jacks up the prices cause they know they can, we no longer have a free market.
i bought all our easter chocolate the NIGHT before easter because the shelves were STILL loaded and even then only about half of it was even discounted. i bought everything out of non-cadbury brands because all of that was 50% or more off but cadbury had barely dropped their price at all.
and then to be able to go in to a store on the following tuesday and see a full range of easter eggs ON THE FUCKING TUESDAY AFTER EASTER is fucking insane. because just everyone universally agreed we're not paying that fucking much for chocolate





















