Opinion Your Living Standards Have Declined Dramatically


by Jeffrey A. Tucker

In the old days, shopping for groceries used to be a joy. By old days, I mean two years ago. Now, it is shocking and miserable. You look at these prices and wonder if you can even afford normal foods we took for granted.

Everyone knows about the egg problem, which is being chalked up to a bird flu, just as Putin was responsible for the gas price and greedy meat processors caused beef prices to soar. Sorry but this is ridiculous. The price of eggs is up dramatically because all the costs associated with making them available to consumers are up.

At first, there was just a shortage because grocery chains resisted price increases. Once they came back to the shelves, the cost dramatically rose. You are going to pay more for the worst eggs than the best egg cost only one year ago. Unless you know someone with chickens or have them yourself, you are stuck with thin shells and light-yellow yokes forever, while paying through the nose for them.

The bottom line is undeniable: in a mere two years, many of the things you loved, healthy food for your families—I’m not talking about the all-carb diet they want us to adopt—has now doubled in price. Some is up 50 percent and some is up 150 percent. This damage is absolutely not captured in the CPI, which has huge drawbacks by being calculated on an annual basis and for being a weighted index number that fails to capture the reality on the ground.

The reality you see on the shelves of your local store. The grocery prices tell the truth that you are being pillaged.

The pillaging is not limited to this problem however. And by the way, this is NOT going to improve. It would take a dramatic deflation to restore our living standards. The Fed will never permit that. At best, their intention is to take down the inflation rate to 2 percent per annum. It now stands at about 6 percent, maybe. So even if it happens to fall to zero, all prevailing prices will stick. That means that you have been robbed.

The fundamentals of household finance are even worse. Credit card balances are way up. Savings is way down. And real income (which is adjusted for inflation) has been falling now for 21 months straight. Truly, it’s panic time but people are so beaten down and exhausted that they are not panicking. Most people have acquiesced in exhaustion of the shock and awe to which they have been subjected.

These charts portend terrible things for our future. It truly means the end of prosperity. In fact, middle-class people barely remember what that was like even though we experienced it as recently as 2019. We didn’t have to choose between eating good food and heating our homes, paying our cell phone bill and going on vacation, drinking good wine and joining a gym. We could do all of those things.

No more. Our living standards have been taken down a peg or several. Of course it doesn’t affect the very wealthy that gathered this week in Davos for the World Economic Forum. They have all the resources they need and can continue to live as always. It’s the rest of us who are being ground down into the dirt.

Note too the smaller packages of everything, with producers shaving off ounces every few weeks. Try to buy the big packages like three years ago and you are likely out of luck. My favorite Turkish coffee is the same price but half the size. Did humanity suddenly desire smaller quantities of things? No, this is just a way to disguise price increases without letting the consumer know.
The other day I bought movie tickets but the bottom-line price was higher than the units. That’s because the software added a $5 “convenience fee.” So great to know that now I have to pay an extra fee for delivery of an electronic good.

Remember when Uber and Lyft were cheap and even a good alternative to owning a car? Those days are long over. Now it costs $40 just to get across town in D.C. And New York City, forget it. The prices are astronomical while the subways are more dangerous than ever. Might as well not go.

This is what is happening to us.

Now, to the critical question. How was all this accomplished, this massive increase in taxation by surreptitious means? Please understand: this was accomplished not by Putin or greedy corporations but by the Federal Reserve. They have the legal power to counterfeit. They do it by buying government debt with money that had not previously existed. This new money makes it way through the economy, watering down the value of existing money.

It’s like this. Let’s say you are holding a kids’ birthday party and have only one can of frozen lemonade. But it turns out that 50 kids show up. You do what is possible to stretch the lemonade but each serving gets weaker. At some point it is just water. The kids start to notice. You have to explain that you bumped into the physical limits. The lemonade has become ever less valuable.

It’s the same with the Fed. It does not matter that the dollar can buy more foreign currencies than ever. That has nothing to do with anything. What matters is not how much foreign currency it can buy but how many goods and services it can buy. The reason it buys far less traces to the outrageous monetary expansions of 2020 and 2021. That’s the whole reason. At one point, monetary expansion was running 26 percent per year!

They robbed you to fund their outrageous lockdown experiment and put as many businesses and people on the payroll as possible. They might as well have dropped money from helicopters. Now we are paying the price for this monetary malfeasance.

And now? For the first time ever, M2 is actually falling. How do you think that is going to work out? The mismanagement of our nation’s money stock is breathtaking.

And did you see the idea of a $1 trillion coin floating around again? This has to be the biggest monetary hoax in history. You can’t just mint a round coin, out of any material, even platinum, and cause new wealth to come into existence. The idea keeps popping up but nothing comes of it simply because the alchemy is too obvious even for the power elite to pull off.

Our rulers in D.C. have got themselves into a real fix. The people are furious about what is happening and everyone wants to know why. There is a growing populist movement out there that simply will not go along. We aren’t giving up our gas stoves. We aren’t going to eat bugs. And we aren’t going to give up our birthright to freedom just because a bunch of partying clowns in Davos tell us we have to.

We really do face a choice right now. If we do not act and do not choose wisely, we face a future of growing impoverishment, ill-health, and deprecated living standards. We are not doing this to ourselves. They are doing it to us, and they will continue on this path so long as they can get away with it.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
 
We're going to happen. Another depression aren't we? But this time it's going to be mega global, isn't it
That's probably the least of it; I'm guessing certain parts of the global plans haven't been working out, and they're either trying to cover shit up by starting World War 3 on top of all the other pain they can cause. Unironic bane posting about crashing the world plane with no survivors.
 
That's probably the least of it; I'm guessing certain parts of the global plans haven't been working out, and they're either trying to cover shit up by starting World War 3 on top of all the other pain they can cause. Unironic bane posting about crashing the world plane with no survivors.
Somebody once said on this form that The powers to be. Don't care if they rule over utopia or a dead planet as long as they're in charge. I don't know if globalism is really going to sustain itself much longer. It requires one the ability for America to pay for the naval policing and two mutual cooperation amongst nations which seems to be in short supply as of lately as well as the ability to pay for other people's protection
May as well Shill that I made a doom post prediction 2 years ago now. I made my financial moves based on my worst case scenario. Really glad I did.
I'll give it a read
 
I would hazard a strong guess the only thing keeping things going at the moment is consumer credit lines and some hold over government assistance. After I wrote my Doom Post I went hell for leather to buy property in the country. Fired my guns off at the first option that bit and didn't look back. Since Last year I've been adjusting my lifestyle down to conserve resources. Eating alot more hot dogs these days and far less steak. I can't remember the last time I bought bacon. I think it was 2 years ago. Baking my own bread too. Writing this post with my central heating set to 55 degrees. Stuff like that.

Most people though probably didn't react in time, and are now sitting in Urban Apartments where the rent went from 900 a month to 1450. Been running their central heat at 75 degrees even when the temperatures plunged to fucking 5 degrees outside. I honestly expected the meltdown to happen sooner but even I underestimated just how much debt was out in the wild freely available. Start watching out for headlines of corporations exhausting their credit lines and inching towards bankruptcy, combined with surges in single family apartment evictions. That will be the thunder on the horizon.
 
Trump's stimmy checks have cost me more than 10x that thanks to inflation they caused.
Shit on Trump for being a cuck and shutting it down, but that's not how the stimulus money worked.

You should ask your overlords why they're sending money they don't have to their favorite money laundering pot, hand over fist, if you're so worried.
 
Today's morning walk took me to a couple of local supermarkets to check out egg prices. Last Friday paid $7.09 for a dozen of our favorite jumbo eggs at the commissary. To be sure, could have paid $2.54 for a dozen Eggland's Best large eggs, but we like those particular eggs.

First store I went to charged $8.99 for a dozen of their most expensive, free-range eggs. Other eggs were cheaper by the dozen, but not much cheaper.

Then went to the nearby Lucky, or as I think of it, Unlucky supermarket. Their prices are what I consider overall exorbitant. For example, they asked $8.99 for a 12-pack of RC Cola, albeit offering some discount for club members. They asked $7.49 for a pound of Challenge butter, regional brand. The cola goes for five-something, and the butter goes for about four bucks at the commissary. Yoplait yogurt cost 99 cents a cup at Unlucky, but 39 cents at the commissary, and the commissary had coupons for $1 off five cups, making price 19 cents each.

Unlucky's eggs were about the same as the first store's, but spied a dozen for just $4.99. Tastykake fruit pies were 3 for $5. Yesterday my walking buddy and I went to Walmart. She got some Tastykake pies for about $1.65 each. Last time she got those pies, not long ago, they were $1.28. Believe the same pies at the commissary are $1.09 each, they were last time I checked, will check again tomorrow.

Recently the Sara Lee bagels we eat went from six in a bag to five for the same price. Fuck that, Got some Thomas bagels for a few cents more, but with six bagels vice five. Bag of bagels lasts us two weeks.

As an aside, bananas are 44 cents a pound, been that much for years now.

At the commissary, some prices went up, some went down. One big difference over a few years ago - far fewer coupons available. In the past, could have $5-10 in coupons, obtained from various sources. Now if lucky may have $2-3 in coupons, gotten from displays in the commissary. Stuff at the commissary is sold at cost, plus a 5% fee to cover building new commissaries, and you tip the bagger, unless you are a cheap cocksucker and bag your own stuff/use the self-checkout.

Admittedly my experience isn't like others, but am not much for the doompillng in the OP.
 
What part of 'you will eat ze bugs', 'you vill own nothing' and 'you vill be happy' don't you get?

Our rulers are unironically re-enacting a plot straight out of Phantom 2040, an old-ass cartoon. As the plan of the bad guys there is to literally cause an ecological disaster, corrall the survivors into their control domes and lord over everyone in it.

So, hope you either have a steady job, a good stock of food and arms because we're in for some shit.

It really is disturbing how I don't remember what life was like before the Pinko Pox.
Eh, things were on the shitter even back then. It just so happens that we are headed off the cliff right now.
 
I would hazard a strong guess the only thing keeping things going at the moment is consumer credit lines and some hold over government assistance. After I wrote my Doom Post I went hell for leather to buy property in the country. Fired my guns off at the first option that bit and didn't look back. Since Last year I've been adjusting my lifestyle down to conserve resources. Eating alot more hot dogs these days and far less steak. I can't remember the last time I bought bacon. I think it was 2 years ago. Baking my own bread too. Writing this post with my central heating set to 55 degrees. Stuff like that.

Most people though probably didn't react in time, and are now sitting in Urban Apartments where the rent went from 900 a month to 1450. Been running their central heat at 75 degrees even when the temperatures plunged to fucking 5 degrees outside. I honestly expected the meltdown to happen sooner but even I underestimated just how much debt was out in the wild freely available. Start watching out for headlines of corporations exhausting their credit lines and inching towards bankruptcy, combined with surges in single family apartment evictions. That will be the thunder on the horizon.
Bought my house in 2019
At the Time interest rates where at a historical all time low of 2.9 on a 30 year fixed rate. As well first time home buyer incentives like here's 10k free if buy a house in this neighborhood. Best decision ever. Why because 3 year's later rent in my area went up 50%. And they can't build apartments fast enough to keep up with the increased demands
 
Its nice that retards are waking up to whats happening, but its far too little, far too late. Regardless of what anyone does at this point, a serious economic correction is coming and everyone will eat shit. including the fed and the rich.

Would be kinda convienient if a shittily engineered virus/vaccination wiped out a significant amount of the populace before this happens so the ones that are left are easier to control or something.

Bought my house in 2019
At the Time interest rates where at a historical all time low of 2.9 on a 30 year fixed rate. As well first time home buyer incentives like here's 10k free if buy a house in this neighborhood. Best decision ever. Why because 3 year's later rent in my area went up 50%. And they can't build apartments fast enough to keep up with the increased demands
Its not necessarily an increased demand for housing, but a demand for cheap housing causing over production of houses, and a bigger crash later and this is on top of welfare housing (also not sustainable).
 
you are stuck with thin shells and light-yellow yokes forever, while paying through the nose for them.

I thought I just got unlucky after paying $4.69 for the cheapest dozen eggs I could find.

I didn't realise why the woman next to me kept looking through cartons even though the eggs weren't cracked. It was the shells. They were so thin in so many places. And yeah. The yolks are practically the color of Country Crock. Luckily I don't go through eggs quickly. But if you really like eggs, bake a lot or have a big family then it's going to cost a fortune if you want to keep up with the same amount of eggs you are used to.

I've noticed that the clearance rack is cleaned out of goodies faster and faster. I gotta get to the store early if I want drastically marked down stuff that was too expensive to sell before it was practically expired.

It really sucks if you have any sort of dietary restrictions. All the gluten free stuff is so pricey I end up with rice cakes and sesame bars unless something is clearance. I've noticed a lot of stuff is sold out for weeks too.
 
Just imagine if they hadn't sent all the jobs overseas and imported cheap legal and illegal labor to take jobs people might actually have jobs that pay a decent wage, and they might be able to ride through the inflation. Nope, the capitalist had to have globalism and their sources of cheap labor. This kept wages low and now people can't afford the basic necessities like food rent and utilities. It seems like paying people like it's still the 1980's with 2023's prices isn't a good idea.

They are preparing to admit there is a recession. It's coming this year. Things are going to be so bad they won't be able to lie about it. Gas prices are going back up as well. More people need to understand how capitalism has failed. It's time for something new. Just throw capitalism in the trash next to socialism and communism.
 
Today's morning walk took me to a couple of local supermarkets to check out egg prices. Last Friday paid $7.09 for a dozen of our favorite jumbo eggs at the commissary. To be sure, could have paid $2.54 for a dozen Eggland's Best large eggs, but we like those particular eggs.

First store I went to charged $8.99 for a dozen of their most expensive, free-range eggs. Other eggs were cheaper by the dozen, but not much cheaper.

Then went to the nearby Lucky, or as I think of it, Unlucky supermarket. Their prices are what I consider overall exorbitant. For example, they asked $8.99 for a 12-pack of RC Cola, albeit offering some discount for club members. They asked $7.49 for a pound of Challenge butter, regional brand. The cola goes for five-something, and the butter goes for about four bucks at the commissary. Yoplait yogurt cost 99 cents a cup at Unlucky, but 39 cents at the commissary, and the commissary had coupons for $1 off five cups, making price 19 cents each.

Unlucky's eggs were about the same as the first store's, but spied a dozen for just $4.99. Tastykake fruit pies were 3 for $5. Yesterday my walking buddy and I went to Walmart. She got some Tastykake pies for about $1.65 each. Last time she got those pies, not long ago, they were $1.28. Believe the same pies at the commissary are $1.09 each, they were last time I checked, will check again tomorrow.

Recently the Sara Lee bagels we eat went from six in a bag to five for the same price. Fuck that, Got some Thomas bagels for a few cents more, but with six bagels vice five. Bag of bagels lasts us two weeks.

As an aside, bananas are 44 cents a pound, been that much for years now.

At the commissary, some prices went up, some went down. One big difference over a few years ago - far fewer coupons available. In the past, could have $5-10 in coupons, obtained from various sources. Now if lucky may have $2-3 in coupons, gotten from displays in the commissary. Stuff at the commissary is sold at cost, plus a 5% fee to cover building new commissaries, and you tip the bagger, unless you are a cheap cocksucker and bag your own stuff/use the self-checkout.

Admittedly my experience isn't like others, but am not much for the doompillng in the OP.
Are you allowed to keep chickens where you live? At this point it'd be worth considering if you can.
Just imagine if they hadn't sent all the jobs overseas and imported cheap legal and illegal labor to take jobs people might actually have jobs that pay a decent wage, and they might be able to ride through the inflation. Nope, the capitalist had to have globalism and their sources of cheap labor. This kept wages low and now people can't afford the basic necessities like food rent and utilities. It seems like paying people like it's still the 1980's with 2023's prices isn't a good idea.

They are preparing to admit there is a recession. It's coming this year. Things are going to be so bad they won't be able to lie about it. Gas prices are going back up as well. More people need to understand how capitalism has failed. It's time for something new. Just throw capitalism in the trash next to socialism and communism.
Yes, let's bootlick for CBDCs instead.
 
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