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Inflation and Prices: Food and Energy

Posted: Tue Nov 23, 2010 5:01 pm
by Phatscotty
That is what we are hearing in Minnesota....So far heard it from someone who said they heard it on the radio and had it confirmed by their father. Anyone else hearing this?

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Tue Nov 23, 2010 5:06 pm
by Timminz
Did that here, on Friday just passed.

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Tue Nov 23, 2010 9:51 pm
by radiojake
What is the price of petrol (gas) in the States?

Here in Australia, it averages between $1.20 & $1.30 a litre - which by rough conversion equals $4.50 - $4.9 a gallon (i think)

(this is in Australian dollars, however the USD and AUD have been close enough to parity of late)

Also, does anyone use LPG as fuel for their cars?

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Tue Nov 23, 2010 9:56 pm
by BigBallinStalin
As low as $2.50 up to probably $4.00 per gallon, which is roughly $0.60 to $1 per liter.

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Tue Nov 23, 2010 10:44 pm
by Phatscotty
2.77 tonight

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Tue Nov 23, 2010 10:49 pm
by karel
we have been at 2.89 for the last month,now its 2.98

but we always have high gas....not sure why

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Wed Nov 24, 2010 1:30 am
by Phatscotty
karel wrote:we have been at 2.89 for the last month,now its 2.98

but we always have high gas....not sure why


just keep paying up, and I'm sure it will all go away. And if gas gets too high, we can have a large group of people who are not sure why, and then just vote to get free gas for everyone. We have no responsibility whatsoever to demand/implement a strong currency policy, nor do we have any reason to keep balanced books. We can just keep borrowing and devaluing our currency, and the people who sell us oil will just keep accepting our debased currency until they are using it for toilet paper. Maybe not tho...

Hey, it worked for health care

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Wed Nov 24, 2010 1:39 am
by BigBallinStalin
Phatscotty wrote:
karel wrote:we have been at 2.89 for the last month,now its 2.98

but we always have high gas....not sure why


just keep paying up, and I'm sure it will all go away. And if gas gets too high, we can have a large group of people who are not sure why, and then just vote to get free gas for everyone. We have no responsibility whatsoever to demand/implement a strong currency policy, nor do we have any reason to keep balanced books. We can just keep borrowing and devaluing our currency, and the people who sell us oil will just keep accepting our debased currency until they are using it for toilet paper. Maybe not tho...

Hey, it worked for health care


Either that, or it's taxes keeping the price so high.

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Wed Nov 24, 2010 1:54 am
by Phatscotty
BigBallinStalin wrote:
Phatscotty wrote:
karel wrote:we have been at 2.89 for the last month,now its 2.98

but we always have high gas....not sure why


just keep paying up, and I'm sure it will all go away. And if gas gets too high, we can have a large group of people who are not sure why, and then just vote to get free gas for everyone. We have no responsibility whatsoever to demand/implement a strong currency policy, nor do we have any reason to keep balanced books. We can just keep borrowing and devaluing our currency, and the people who sell us oil will just keep accepting our debased currency until they are using it for toilet paper. Maybe not tho...

Hey, it worked for health care


Either that, or it's taxes keeping the price so high.


In Russia, BBS creates his own extra credit points.

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Sat Dec 04, 2010 12:40 pm
by Phatscotty
okay, I guess it took a week, but now gas is 3.09 (was 2.73-7)

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Sun Dec 05, 2010 10:23 am
by Baron Von PWN

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2010 3:23 pm
by thegreekdog
A gallon of milk costs approximately $3.50. Just providing some perspective.

I wonder how much milk we import from the Middle East.

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2010 3:35 pm
by Phatscotty
thegreekdog wrote:A gallon of milk costs approximately $3.50. Just providing some perspective.

I wonder how much milk we import from the Middle East.


I would say the thing that affects Milk prices the most, besides supply, is transportation.

Of course, semi's run diesel , which is closer to 4$. I would guess at 6$ gas, milk would be 4.29, and that is if there aren't any kind of supply-side problems.

Re: Gas Spiking 30 Cents/Gallon Tomorrow?

Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2010 4:34 pm
by thegreekdog
Phatscotty wrote:
thegreekdog wrote:A gallon of milk costs approximately $3.50. Just providing some perspective.

I wonder how much milk we import from the Middle East.


I would say the thing that affects Milk prices the most, besides supply, is transportation.

Of course, semi's run diesel , which is closer to 4$. I would guess at 6$ gas, milk would be 4.29, and that is if there aren't any kind of supply-side problems.


Damn you and your logic!

Seriously though, I didn't think of that.

Carl Buddig Ham Update!

Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 3:20 am
by Phatscotty
Some of you may remember my story about how I always ate ham sandwiches at work. Getting back to speed, originally, in 1996, the ham package had 19 pieces in it and sold for 49 cents. I know this because I split them evenly between to buns. Over the years, I watched the price go up, and the quantity go down (double inflation). I think it's down to 15 piece now for 69-79 cents, but the latest trick is the ham pieces went from squares to circles, and every other piece was extra thin sliced to the point of not even being a circle on one side...

Re: Carl Buddig Ham Update!

Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 11:25 pm
by BigBallinStalin
Phatscotty wrote:Some of you may remember my story about how I always ate ham sandwiches at work. Getting back to speed, originally, in 1996, the ham package had 19 pieces in it and sold for 49 cents. I know this because I split them evenly between to buns. Over the years, I watched the price go up, and the quantity go down (double inflation). I think it's down to 15 piece now for 69-79 cents, but the latest trick is the ham pieces went from squares to circles, and every other piece was extra thin sliced to the point of not even being a circle on one side...


And why does this happen, Phatscotty? What's the cause of this sliced ham catastrophe?

Re: Carl Buddig Ham Update!

Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 11:51 pm
by Phatscotty
BigBallinStalin wrote:
Phatscotty wrote:Some of you may remember my story about how I always ate ham sandwiches at work. Getting back to speed, originally, in 1996, the ham package had 19 pieces in it and sold for 49 cents. I know this because I split them evenly between to buns. Over the years, I watched the price go up, and the quantity go down (double inflation). I think it's down to 15 piece now for 69-79 cents, but the latest trick is the ham pieces went from squares to circles, and every other piece was extra thin sliced to the point of not even being a circle on one side...


And why does this happen, Phatscotty? What's the cause of this sliced ham catastrophe?


I have my theories, but what I am going to do is hand-write a letter to Buddig asking them their reasons. I will get back to you when my inflation concerns get bought out by a handout of free Buddig ham.

Re: Carl Buddig Ham Update!

Posted: Mon Jan 24, 2011 12:20 am
by BigBallinStalin
Phatscotty wrote:
BigBallinStalin wrote:
Phatscotty wrote:Some of you may remember my story about how I always ate ham sandwiches at work. Getting back to speed, originally, in 1996, the ham package had 19 pieces in it and sold for 49 cents. I know this because I split them evenly between to buns. Over the years, I watched the price go up, and the quantity go down (double inflation). I think it's down to 15 piece now for 69-79 cents, but the latest trick is the ham pieces went from squares to circles, and every other piece was extra thin sliced to the point of not even being a circle on one side...


And why does this happen, Phatscotty? What's the cause of this sliced ham catastrophe?


I have my theories, but what I am going to do is hand-write a letter to Buddig asking them their reasons. I will get back to you when my inflation concerns get bought out by a handout of free Buddig ham.


Haha, ok, sounds good

Re: Inflation and Prices: Food and Energy

Posted: Wed Jan 26, 2011 10:26 am
by Johnny Rockets
I'm paying 1.9 per L ....which is 4.36 per gallon.......

What pisses me off is that we float on oil. Fucking taxes....


Johnny Rockets

Re: Inflation and Prices: Food and Energy

Posted: Wed Jan 26, 2011 10:30 am
by thegreekdog
The US federal government imposes an 18.4 cents per gallon tax on gasoline.

New York imposes an additional 31.9 cents per gallon of gasoline.
New Jersey's tax is 14.5 cents per gallon.
Pennsylvania's is 31.1 cents per gallon.

So, for every gasoline you buy, you're paying between 30 and 50 cents additional in tax.

By comparison, most food products are exempt from state sales tax and there is no federal tax on food. Further, sales tax rates are generally between 6% and 9% (or 6 cents per dollar, 12 cents per two dollars, and 18 cents per three dollars).

So, to compare:

- One gallon of gasoline in New York sold for $2.00 will have an additional tax of 50 cents (total cost $2.50).
- A taxable product sold for $2.00 in New York (8% tax rate) will have an additional tax of 16 cents (total cost $2.16).

Re: Inflation and Prices: Food and Energy

Posted: Wed Jan 26, 2011 3:16 pm
by BigBallinStalin
Oh, I see what the problem is. It isn't the taxes... it's the TAX LAWYERS. I MEAN!?! WITHOUT TAX LAWYERS, THERE WOULD BE NO TAXES!!

GRAB YOUR PITCHFORKS AND TORCHES!!! WE'RE COMING TO GET YOU, TGD.

Re: Inflation and Prices: Food and Energy

Posted: Wed Jan 26, 2011 3:18 pm
by thegreekdog
That doesn't take into consideration taxes that are not directly passed through to the customer (for example, income taxes or taxes that the gasoline company pays when it purchases the oil... if any).

Re: Inflation and Prices: Food and Energy

Posted: Wed Jan 26, 2011 4:18 pm
by BigBallinStalin
thegreekdog wrote:That doesn't take into consideration taxes that are not directly passed through to the customer (for example, income taxes or taxes that the gasoline company pays when it purchases the oil... if any).


Oh you slick tax attorneys! You won't fool us!!!!

=D

Re: Inflation and Prices: Food and Energy

Posted: Fri Feb 04, 2011 9:05 am
by Phatscotty
Word is that the shit is only going down in Egypt because food prices doubled...

Re: Inflation and Prices: Food and Energy

Posted: Fri Feb 04, 2011 10:13 am
by PLAYER57832
thegreekdog wrote:That doesn't take into consideration taxes that are not directly passed through to the customer (for example, income taxes or taxes that the gasoline company pays when it purchases the oil... if any).

It also doesn't take into account that a major cost of most food is packaging, which often comes from petrochemicals. Add in the other big cost of transportation and...

Ironically, this skewed balance is why restaurants began "supersizing". When the major cost was waiters, etc, then giving more food was a great way to bring in people. This, in turn has been partially blamed for our obesity epidemic. That is skewing folk's ideas of what "reasonable portions" are. Plus, low income areas often have only fast food places available.