Gulf Today

Consumers increasing­ly pushing back against record price increase

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Inflation has changed the way many Americans shop. Now, those changes in consumer habits are helping bring down inflation.

Fed up with prices that remain about 19%, on average, above where they were before the pandemic, consumers are fighting back. In grocery stores, they’re shiting away from name brands to store-brand items, switching to discount stores or simply buying fewer items like snacks or gourmet foods.

More Americans are buying used cars, too, rather than new, forcing some dealers to provide discounts on new cars again. But the growing consumer pushback to what critics condemn as price-gouging has been most evident with food as well as with consumer goods like paper towels and napkins.

In recent months, consumer resistance has led large food companies to respond by sharply slowing their price increases from the peaks of the past three years. This doesn’t mean grocery prices will fall back to their levels of a few years ago, though with some items, including eggs, apples and milk, prices are below their peaks. But the milder increases in food prices should help further cool overall inflation, which is down sharply from a peak of 9.1% in 2022 to 3.1%.

Public frustratio­n with prices has become a central issue in President Joe Biden’s bid for re-election. Polls show that despite the dramatic decline in inflation, many consumers are unhappy that prices remain so much higher than they were before inflation began accelerati­ng in 2021.

Biden has echoed the criticism of many letleaning economists that corporatio­ns jacked up their prices more than was needed to cover their own higher costs, allowing themselves to boost their profits. The White House has also atacked “shrinkflat­ion,” whereby a company, rather than raising the price of a product, instead shrinks the amount inside the package. In a video released on Super Bowl Sunday, Biden denounced shrinkflat­ion as a “rip-off.”

Consumer pushback against high prices suggests to many economists that inflation should further ease. That would make this bout of inflation markedly different from the debilitati­ng price spikes of the 1970s and early 1980s, which took longer to defeat. When high inflation persists, consumers often develop an inflationa­ry psychology: Ever-rising prices lead them to accelerate their purchases before costs rise further, a trend that can itself perpetuate inflation. “That was the fear - that everybody would tolerate higher prices,” said Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY, a consulting firm, who notes that it hasn’t happened. “I don’t think we’ve moved into a high inflation regime.”

Instead, this time many consumers have reacted like Stuart Dryden, a commercial underwrite­r at a bank who lives in Arlington, Virginia. On a recent trip to his regular grocery store, Dryden, 37, pointed out big price disparitie­s between Krat Heinz-branded products and their store-label competitor­s, which he now favors.

Dryden, for example, loves cream cheese and bagels. A 12-ounce tub of Krat’s Philadelph­ia cream cheese costs $6.69. The store brand, he noted, is just $3.19.

A 24-pack of Krat single cheese slices is $7.69; the store label, $2.99. And a 32-ounce Heinz ketchup botle is $6.29, while the alternativ­e is just $1.69. Similar gaps existed with mac-andcheese and shredded cheese products.

“Just those five products together already cost nearly $30,” Dryden said. The alternativ­es were less than half that, he calculated, at about $13.

“I’ve been trying private-label options, and the quality is the same and it’s almost a nobrainer to switch from the products I used to buy a ton of to just the private label,” Dryden said.

Alex Abraham, a spokesman for Krat Heinz, said that its costs rose 3% in the final three months of last year but that the company raised its own prices only 1%.

“We are doing everything possible to find efficienci­es in our factories and other parts of our business to offset and mitigate further price increases,” Abraham said.

Last week, Krat Heinz said sales fell in the final three months of last year as more consumers traded down to cheaper brands.

Dryden has taken other steps to save money: A year ago, he moved into a new apartment ater his previous landlord jacked up his rent by about 50%. His former apartment had been next to a relatively pricey grocery store, Whole Foods. Now, he shops at a nearby Amazon Fresh and has started visiting the discount grocer Aldi every couple of weeks.

Samuel Rines, an investment strategist at Corbu, says that Pepsico, Kimberly-clark, Procter & Gamble and many other consumer food and packaged goods companies exploited the rise in input costs stemming from supply-chain disruption­s and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine to dramatical­ly raise their prices - and increase their profits - in 2021 and 2022.

In recent months, consumer resistance has led large food companies to respond by sharply slowing their price increases from the peaks of the past three years

 ?? ?? ↑ A customer leaves a grocery store in New York on Sunday.
↑ A customer leaves a grocery store in New York on Sunday.

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