UK Huge price increase means ‘dummy’ coffee jars are appearing in supermarkets - "Empty coffee jars have been put on the shelves of a supermarket in London in an apparent bid to deter customers from shoplifting amid the cost of living crisis."



Empty coffee jars have been put on the shelves of a supermarket in London in an apparent bid to deter customers from shoplifting amid the cost of living crisis.

A Co-op shop in Walthamstow used the ‘dummy’ products on jars of instant coffee, the price of which has been rising due to inflation.

“This product is a dummy, not for sale, please ask a member of staff for help,” read a sign on one of the jars.

A spokesperson for the supermarket, which operates a franchise model, said its priority was to protect staff safety as “shoplifting can be a flashpoint for violence”.

According to the Office for National Statistics, the price of instant coffee has increased by 13 per cent over the past year.

The cost of food has been soaring over the past year amid Vladimir Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine.

There was some optimism on Tuesday that the rapidly rising increase in food prices may have reached its peak as a survey of prices in shops suggested they fell between April and May.

Food inflation fell to 15.4 per cent in the year to May, according to a survey by the British Retail Consortium (BRC) and Nielsen.

It was down from 15.7 per cent in April.

But the overall rate of inflation at grocers reached a new high of 9 of per cent, fuelled by the increasing price of coffee, chocolate and non-food items.

The 15.7 per cent is still a very high figure and means that a person who spent around £20 in a food shop a year ago would now be paying a little over £23 for the same items.

This is an average so the exact number would depend on what they bought.

Although May’s figure is a little lower than the food inflation seen in April, it is still the second fastest annual increase the BRC has ever measured, it said.

It added that the price of fresh food increased by 17.2 per cent in the year to May, down from 17.8 per cent in April.

However, ambient food inflation – that is to say shelf-stable items that can be stored at room temperature – rose from 12.9 per cent in April to 13.1 per cent in May.

Overall inflation in shops rose from 8.8 per cent to 9 per cent between April and May, the BRC said, an all-time high.

“While overall shop price inflation rose slightly in May, households will welcome food inflation beginning to fall,” said BRC chief executive Helen Dickinson.

“The slow in inflation was largely driven by lower energy and commodity costs starting to filter through to lower prices of some staples including butter, milk, fruit and fish.

“Conversely, the price of chocolate and coffee rose off the back of the ongoing high global costs for these commodities. While non-food inflation rose, consumers are benefiting from heavy discounts in footwear as well as books and home entertainment.”

Ms Dickinson added:“While there is reason to believe that food inflation might be peaking, it is vital that government does not hamper this early progress by piling more costs onto retailers and forcing up the cost of goods even further.

“The biggest risk comes from policies such as the incoming border checks and reforms to packaging recycling fees.”
 
In my local ghetto Wal-Mart and Walgreens, most toiletries are locked in cages, and coffee is sold at check-out.
 
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The cost of food has been soaring over the past year amid Vladimir Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine.

What the fuck is wrong with these people that they have to put this awkwardly in the story and then don't explain how this is somehow connected to the Ukranian conflict. You're just supposed to swallow it down like truth. Is Ukraine a big coffee supplier? Wrong climate, I think.
 
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Taking bets on the date that King Chuckie is dragged out of Buckingham Palace by a starving, enraged mob and strung up from a streetlight.
you think the king has any real power.
the royals are basically celebrities, who dont actually have any talent to be celebrated for.
if the king ever tried to seriously exercise his power, theyd be kicked out the castle. all their power is hypothetical.
 
What a load of bullshit, its cornershop prices for brand products that are cheaper in the supermarket by a noticeable amount and also are brand products. This all sounds far more like the reality of rising crime in London (this wasn't in a nice part of the city) is having its impact than the cost of living crisis.
 
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What a load of bullshit, its cornershop prices for brand products that are cheaper in the supermarket by a noticeable amount and also are brand products. This all sounds far more like the reality of rising crime in London (this wasn't in a nice part of the city) is having its impact than the cost of living crisis.
Exactly. Nearly every time a story like this comes out, it's about some tip of a town in some shitty London borough. The media tries to pin it on whatever crisis it wants us to be scared about right now, and then a&h acts like it's a country-wide issue and goes into screeching chimp mode.

Walthamstow is a dump with a fancy high street. This coop is putting out dummies because the place is a crime-ridden shithole, not because of "cost of living" or the Ukraine war. Everyone pouncing on this as proof of some smug little sneer about muh briish is a fucking cretin. Might as well judge the whole usa off some stabby cunt in a new York bodega.

e: and fuck autocuckwreck as well!
 
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X-post from the Brit thread



Steak, coffee and cheese locked up as shoplifting rises​

Some stores are also limiting the number of items on shelves in an attempt to reduce theft.
It comes as data analysed by the BBC showed shoplifting offences had now returned to pre-pandemic levels as the cost of living rises.
Others insisted the measures are not being taken nationwide, but have been implemented at individual stores facing high rates of theft.
An Aldi spokesperson insisted it was a localised store issue and not a nationwide policy.
Recently Sainsbury's faced a backlash after introducing barriers at some of its self-checkout tills, which force shoppers to scan their receipts before being allowed to leave.

It comes as food prices are rising at the fastest rate in nearly 45 years.*

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Gwent Police - responsible for overseeing Blaenau Gwent, Caerphilly, Monmouthshire, Newport and Torfaen in Wales - reported the sharpest rise, with instances of shoplifting surging to 961 between January and March, up from 552 in the same period last year.


*Did we see mass shoplifting 45 years ago, when prices were rising at the same rate they are now?

The BBC blame the high prices, but anyone who is honest can see what's going on.
 
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