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Fine, just buy the raw meat. Sale prices used to dip as low as $2.48 a pound for hamburger. Now $5 a pound is a relatively good deal.
If you don’t see that your grocery bill has gone up in the past few months you probably are not paying attention.
I've been buying grass fed ground beef from local farmers for 15 years. When we started, it was $7.50/lb. Now it's $9.60/lb.
PeopleUnited says
Fine, just buy the raw meat. Sale prices used to dip as low as $2.48 a pound for hamburger. Now $5 a pound is a relatively good deal.
If you don’t see that your grocery bill has gone up in the past few months you probably are not paying attention.
Again, you are answering wrong question and again with feelz. If you insist on picking just one thing - meat - what was the increase of price of meat in %% from May to June, June to July, July to Aug? Did these %% increase, decrease, go up then down, go down then up and by how much?
PS. My local Lucky constantly has sales on tri-tip at $3.97 pp. Does it prove anything? Of course not.
Look, it’s not feelz it’s fact. And its not just meat. Mayonnaise, lettuce, baked goods, corn chips. They are all up. Bury your head in the zelenskis ass
https://www.bls.gov/opub/ted/2023/consumer-prices-up-3-2-percent-from-july-2022-to-july-2023.htm
But the data is clear. Prices continue to rise.
People without houses will suffer.
With higher rates market should crash but it isn't.
The question is if median income and wage increases are keeping up with inflation.
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Interesting as this article presents housing as an ownership crisis due to hoarding by the top 10% and corporations :
https://www.oftwominds.com/blogaug23/hoarding-housing8-23.html
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GNL says
ad says
The question is if median income and wage increases are keeping up with inflation.
Are you seriously wondering if wages are keeping up with inflation?
No need to wonder. The answer is NO for the majority. Yes for the lucky few.
It's nonsense.
$5 for a sandwich? An avocado toast is $15.
As a millennial I don’t remember getting a good sandwich for $5. Was that 30years ago?
Eh, this is feelz, not data.
This is what will naturally happen in our system of fiat and debt fueled economy.
Before the COVID-19 scam our local bagel shop sold a chicken breast sandwich for less than $5. They now want almost $10.
Best way to track inflation
We didn't? Securized subprime mortgages is still a thing?
Rubicon says
As a millennial I don’t remember getting a good sandwich for $5. Was that 30years ago?
20 years ago, you could get a decent grinder (sub, hoagie) for $5.
Jimmy Johns, Jersey Mikes and Firehouse are the chains around me that I'd pick over Subway 100% of the time.
If subprime lending was the driver of the housing boom, well then you would think that where house prices rose, you would have seen the largest growth in subprime lending
Much had to do with adjustable rate mortgages.
For the record, I think RE will remain out of reach for more and more people. Inventory will not be sufficient to change that for a long time.
Lower rates won't help.
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1. Will the bubble burst?
2. When will the bubble burst?
3. Will we ever see 300k homes again in Mexifornia?
Sam