this post was submitted on 03 Aug 2023
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I think it's ridiculous that the presumption that prices have stabilized means that costs have fallen and the companies are pocketing the difference. They probably are pocketing the difference, but there's no evidence to say that it's actually a significant amount. This author suggests that the companies' costs have probably plummeted by a good 20-50% or something and isn't passing that along when their costs probably only dropped by like 5%, an amount that virtually nobody would notice if the end prices have actually fallen.
I've noticed that several beers have fallen in price these last few months(hell, some have dropped in the last two years), yet nobody has ever mentioned it once. I know a guy who works with beer, and he told me that he hasn't noticed any changes in spending habits regarding the changes in prices going down. Only when the prices go up do people notice.
There are definitely issues in the supply chain caused by a lack of competition, but this isn't remotely a new thing, nor is recent phenomena evidence that the prices is especially worse now than it was ten years ago. Blaming the BoC for doing their job isn't the solution, but actually identifying specific issues and proposing workable changes is how to make things better, not having a tantrum like a man-baby.
That's not what I said. That's also not what the report said. You're arguing with yourself at this point.
The report says at the beginning of covid costs dropped, but prices didn't, with the difference going to profits. Then when costs went back up prices went up maintaining the existing profit margins. That's a "price ratchet" and you can easily figure out what happens after a few cycles. Somehow the bank of Canada concluded this isn't a factor in inflation because they looked at both parts of the price ratchet separately instead of together.